Running Rigging

Running rigging is the term for the rigging of a sailing vessel that is used for raising, lowering and controlling the sails - as opposed to the standing rigging, which supports the mast and other spars. The running rigging includes halyards and sheets.
Some types of running rigging include: - halyards, which are used to raise sails. - downhauls, which lower a sail or a yard, and can be used to adjust the tension on the luff of a sail - Cunninghams, which tighten the luff of a sail - Guys, which control spinnakers - Topping lifts, which hold up booms or yards - Barber hauls, which adjust the sheeting angle of a foresail (jib) Older ships (particularly square-rigged vessels) required even more running rigging like braces, which were used to adjust the fore and aft angle of a yard and braces, which adjusted the up and down angle of a yard.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
ravgga
john dudley, 2nd earl of warwick
list of flags by color
tadashi sawamura
portuguese language literature
dennis dawson
paradise by the dashboard light
cavus
horizon league
don revie
kenji mizoguchi
american comic book
xsl attack
uss rainbow (as 7)
missouri valley conference
uss fletcher
john marshall harlan ii
hashimoto's thyroiditis
mark whiten
hp pavilion
san jose sabercats
the wind's twelve quarters
coffin ship
list of string theory topics
qal'at ar rum
vintila horia
mizoguchi
search.ch
civil unions in ireland
chia
2002 03 in english football
kylie travis
list of banned videogames
albanifriedhof
kerr effect
same sex marriage in massachusetts
uss eagle (1798)
same sex couple
richard wainwright
12 golden country greats
stan kenton
bheki
bobby lowe
malt liquor