Who needs the expensive and clumsy commercial self-raising and mast climbing systems when you've got this simple, efficient, and safe method. Think light! Thank you!
I've been looking at getting up the mast for a while, and looked at a good number of RU-vid videos and products online. This is by far the easiest, cost effective and pro way in my view. You earned yourself a subscriber today 👍
Thanks dude, everyone else's videos on climbing the mast don't show enough of how it all works, with your system there ain't much to show, just a simple safe system.... Nice.
Thanks for posting this. I have just tried it out (using a 2 step wooden rope ladder re-purposed as a bosun's chair) plus stuff I had lying around in lockers; blocks and an old jib sheet. Up the mast for the first time to fix the steaming light, and all worked out well. Thumbs up!
That is an excellent video, very well explained and seems straight forward!!! I'll certainly give it a try soon as I need to get a view of my airspeed gizmo up there. thanks for sharing and for the clear and concise explanations. Have a great day
Thank you! I'm a 55-year sailor but have never had to do this solo before. Seen it done. Forgot the rigging. After about five other RU-vid videos full irrelevant and narcissistic crap (all done by millennials, of course), you delivered the goods. Thanks again.
Great way to climb up the mast, one must be careful of the rope that falls on deck while ascending though. If it gets tangled somewhere then there is no way to get down!
I like the simplicity of this system, and maybe when moored in flat seas it looks fantastic. But I can't see how this would work when you're in any sea at all. I've used the Dutch 'TopClimber' ascender system in 1.5 metre seas and it was ok, but only because the halyard I went up on was winched super tight.
Hi. Thank you for sharing. This what I'm been looking. What about a backup IF somehow the halyard breaks? You use a second halyard? if I understand it correct it will lead to a free fall.
Genius 🎉 i need to go up my wooden mast regular...oiling etc. ladder is awful 😵💫 will sort a pulley system out 4:1 for me tho...i ate all the Vegan pies...😊😂
Great method and well explained! I have two suggestions for improvement though; I would tie of the shieve rope differently on the hoist line. With your solution there is nothing holding the shieve line if the main comes off the shieve.. And I would add a body harness cause if you have an insident, for example bang into the mast due to waves, you can fall out of the bousuns chair.
Very smart! Simple and understandable! I just wonder how this will work if you absolutely need to get up the mast and the waves are one meter or more. But, it should work fine as long as the seas are flat.
Ha, good question as seas rarely flat even with no wind. Solution is patience. Keep legs wrapped around mast, and/or braced against stay, holding yourself from getting knocked around too much. Pull yourself up between waves during moment boat is steady. The higher you go up and the bigger the waves, the longer you have to wait but you've got nothing but time; you will make it up eventually. Also, this is good time to use climbing harness with thick pants for padding instead of bosun chair because climbing harness not so easy to fall out of.
Hi! Thanks for the video, a new way of climbing looks more easy! Short question. My boat have just a wire with a shackl coming down. I need to climb to get more ropes form the mast and down. I am told not to trust the shackls. How to attache a rope to a wire then? Thanks again!
I've used prusik knot on wire but need thin strong line, like 1/4 inch double braid dyneema, with extra turns. Why not trust shackle? If not one, why not two?
as a novice idiot sailor, this looks like the easiest, trustworthy system and and best explained, thank you. Question: do you find your "flipping" solar panels work well?
So I'm curious, I understand that your prusik is being used as the stop on the line being used to pull yourself up. Where is your backup line? What if your block which is connected to the halyard fails?
I agree - the prusik should at least be on the line coming directly from the halyard! If one of the blocks break there is no security and you would fall down!
Black line in video had double braid splice that basically results in zero degradation of line strength. Though most any knot degrades line strength by 50%, working with lines that surpass your body weight is easy. I say, pick lines that are thick enough for your hands for easy handling. Most likely, it'll handle your weight.
I had similar situation so kept short piece of webbing in bosun chair. This webbing was not much longer than arm length and had a carabiner on each end. I'd get as high as possible with the halyard and then shimmy up to top with one end of webbing attached to the bosun chair and the other in my teeth. At top, I'd wrap the webbing around top of mast attaching the carabiner at other end of webbing back to bosun chair. Of course, you stay attached to the halyard and only execute on calm day. Hope this helps. Good luck!
PLEASE do not copy this - this is very out of date technique and dangerous compared to the alternatives. There is no redundancy here and several points of failure that could result in death. At *very* least, have a second prussik safety line onto a *second* halyard, so that you don't fall if a block fails . . mind blowing how few people in the comments notice that there is *zero* redunancy here.
Additionally sitting loose in a bosun chair is also very dangerous. If you lose your balance and fall backwards, you're done. With a harness on that's secured on a second prussik knot thing are much safer without making this method cumbersome.