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Hauling part

Boating Haul outHawse hole

hauling part - The part on the object which is hauled upon.
hawse hole - A hole in the hull for mooring lines to run through.

 


hauling part - The part of a tackle to which power is given.
haul round a mark, point - When a vessel in sailing free has to come closer to the wind as her course alters round a point or buoy.

Fall -- The hauling part of the rope of a tackle.
False keel -- A timber bolted to the underside of the keel proper.
Fathom -- A sea measure of six feet.

1) To pull. The hauling part of a tackle is its fall. To haul (haul out) a boat is to lift her out of the water. See down-haul and outhaul. 2) See veer.
hawse, hawsepipe ...

The end secured to the block is called the standing part, the opposite end, the hauling part.

Fall-The hauling part of the tackle to which power is applied.
Fake- One circle of a coil or rope. To coil or arrange a rope ornamentally with each fake flat, or almost flat, on the deck, usually in a circle or figure-of-eight pattern.

-Lay the end over the hauling part, and pass it through the bight; then take several turns round the standing part, and stop the end. The bight serves as a sling for bales, drawing of timber, &c.

See also: Rope, Boat, Forward, Point, Mast