Gasket (sailing) - Other Related Articles

Other Related Articles

Sails, spars and rigging
Sails (sail plan)
  • Course
  • Crab claw
  • Driver
  • Extra
  • Fisherman
  • Genoa
  • Gennaker
  • Jib
  • Lateen
  • Mainsail
  • Moonraker
  • Royal
  • Skysail
  • Spanker
  • Spinnaker
  • Spritsail
  • Staysail
  • Studding
  • Topgallant
  • Topsail
  • Trysail
  • Watersail
  • lugger
Sail anatomy and materials
  • Clew
  • Foot
  • Head
  • Leech
  • Luff
  • Roach
  • Tack
  • Throat
  • Peak
  • Dacron
  • Technora
  • Kevlar
  • Twaron
Spars
  • Boom
  • Bowsprit
  • Boomkin
  • Dolphin striker
  • Pelican striker
  • Fore-mast
  • Gaff
  • Jackstaff
  • Jibboom
  • Jigger-mast
  • Jury rig
  • Main-mast
  • Mast
  • Mizzen-mast
  • Truck
  • Spinnaker pole
  • Spreader
  • Sprit
  • Topmast
  • Yard
Rigging components
  • Backstay
  • Block
  • Boomkicker
  • Braces
  • Buntlines
  • Chainplates
  • Cleat
  • Clevis pin
  • Clewlines
  • Cunningham
  • Downhaul
  • Earing
  • Fairlead
  • Forestay
  • Gasket
  • Gooseneck
  • Gunter
  • Guy
  • Halyard
  • Kicker
  • Lazy jack
  • Outhaul
  • Parrel beads
  • Peak
  • Preventer
  • Ratlines
  • Running rigging
  • Shackle
  • Standing rigging
  • Sheet
  • Shroud
  • Stay mouse
  • Stays
  • Throat
  • Topping lift
  • Trapeze
  • Traveller
  • Turnbuckle
  • Vang
  • Windex

Read more about this topic:  Gasket (sailing)

Famous quotes containing the words related and/or articles:

    Perhaps it is nothingness which is real and our dream which is non-existent, but then we feel think that these musical phrases, and the notions related to the dream, are nothing too. We will die, but our hostages are the divine captives who will follow our chance. And death with them is somewhat less bitter, less inglorious, perhaps less probable.
    Marcel Proust (1871–1922)

    There are several natural phenomena which I shall have to have explained to me before I can keep on going as a resident member of the human race. One is the metamorphosis which hats and suits undergo exactly one week after their purchase, whereby they are changed from smart, intensely becoming articles of apparel into something children use when they want to “dress up like daddy.”
    Robert Benchley (1889–1945)