Could the mooring dance be slowed by snubbing at the fore-quarter?tangentair wrote:. . . I am not sure in a marina where you are packed closer than at anchor if Frank's bridle is the best option, but it works at anchor.
I'm not sure what dynamic is moving the boat on a mooring pendant, but I doubt it's the same forces as sailing (i.e., tacking) on the anchor rode. The anchor rode can simulate the swing of a long pendulum. That swinging motion is exacerbated as the wind follows the shape of the hull ... both sides of which resemble a sail.
I believe the boat could be resting motionless at the end of a 100' rode, and a 10 mph wind across either side creates enough "aero-lift" to pull the boat out sideways, until the wind-on-beam began pushes it back to the center .... whereupon, the wind lifts the hull to the opposite side. Rather than decreasing to zero speed, as happens in a gravity pendulum, this wind driven pendulum will continue as long as the wind velocity remains adequate.
- Do you think the hull on a short mooring tether would behave according to those physics???
- Regardless of that answer, if wind is simply pushing the boat from side to side ....
- Would snubbing at the fore-quarter prevent the wind from crossing the bow, catching the other side?
- Would snubbing at the fore-quarter cause that side of the bow to bump against, or ride-on the mooring ball?


