🪢

Module 2 of 17

Ropework

Properties of synthetic ropes in common use aboard yachts.

Properties of synthetic ropes in common use

Lesson summaries

Use this module hub to choose the right lesson, then open the dedicated lesson page for the complete explanation, worked examples, FAQs, and practice questions.

Rope Types and Materials

Modern yacht ropes are made from synthetic materials. The most common are: Polyester (Terylene/Dacron) — strong, low stretch, UV-resistant, used for sheets and halyards. Nylon (Polyamide)...

  • Polyester — low stretch, UV-resistant (sheets, halyards)
  • Nylon — high elasticity, shock-absorbing (anchor warps, mooring lines)
Read the full rope types and materials lesson

Rope Care and Handling

Inspect ropes regularly for chafe, fraying, and UV damage. Replace ropes that show signs of wear at loaded points. Wash ropes in fresh water after use in salt water to remove salt crystal...

  • Check for chafe, UV damage, and fraying regularly
  • Wash in fresh water after salt water use
Read the full rope care and handling lesson

Essential Knots

A competent sailor needs a small set of reliable knots. The bowline creates a fixed loop that doesn't slip and is easy to untie — used constantly for attaching sheets to sails, mooring li...

  • Bowline — fixed loop that doesn't slip (many uses)
  • Cleat hitch — securing rope to a cleat
Read the full essential knots lesson

Additional Useful Knots and Hitches

The sheet bend joins two ropes of different diameter — the thicker rope forms a bight and the thinner rope passes through it. Use a double sheet bend for extra security. The clove hitch i...

  • Sheet bend — joining two ropes of different diameter
  • Clove hitch — quick temporary attachment (e.g., fender lanyards)
Read the full additional useful knots and hitches lesson

Rope Construction and Whipping

Ropes are either laid (three strands twisted together, usually right-hand lay) or braided (a woven outer sheath over an inner core). Three-strand laid rope is cheaper and easier to splice...

  • Three-strand laid rope — coil clockwise; cheaper, easy to splice
  • Braided rope — flexible, no kinking, smooth through blocks
Read the full rope construction and whipping lesson

Unlock the complete module

Get every section, quizzes, spaced-repetition flashcards, and mock exams — one-time purchase.