User:KDS4444/Fife rail

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A fife rail is a design element of the bulwarks of an European-style sailing ship usually used either to belay the ship's halyards at the base of a mast (in which case it is sometimes also called a belaying pin rail) or to surround and protect one of the ship's pumps. When surrounding a mast, a fife rail is sometimes referred to specifically by the name of the mast with which it is associated: the main fife rail surrounds the main mast; the mizzen fife rail surrounds the mizzen mast, etc. It is one of a dozen or so types of "rails" often found on such ships.[1] Fife rails are typically horizontal strips of either wood or iron and are joined and fitted to the tops of a series of stanchions. The term apparently derives from the location where the ship's fifer would traditionally sit and play his fife at heaving of the ship's anchor. [2]
A fife rail surrounding a ship's mast will contain a series of belaying pins corresponding to the sails on that mast which they belay. A mast will either have a single horseshoe-shaped fife rail surround the base of the mast on the fore, starboard, and port sides, a single straight rail directly before the mast, or a set of two fife rails, one on each side (fore and aft) of the mast. Each sail associated with a given fife rail will have several corresponding belaying pins set into that rail. Unlike other pinrails on a ship, fife rails are freestanding and do not connect to the ship's hull.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Paasch, Heinrich (1890). The illustrated marine encyclopedia. Antwerp: The author. p. 76. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ Allen, Robert; Schwarz, Catherine, eds. (2006), The Chamber's dictionary, New Deli, India: Allied Chambers Ltd., p. 599, ISBN 81-86062-25-4