Jury rig

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jury rigging (or jerry rigging) refers to makeshift repairs or substitutes, made with only the tools and materials that happen to be on hand.

Contents

[edit] Nautical use

On sailing ships, the jury rig is a replacement mast and yards improvised in case of loss of the original mast.

[edit] Etymology

There are these theories about the origin of the term "jury" in this sense:

  • A Latin and Old French root meaning "aid" or "succour".
  • "jury-mast" derived from "injury-mast".
  • From French du jour = "of the day", thus `temporary'.

[edit] Rigging

Three variations of the jury mast knot
Three variations of the jury mast knot

While ships typically carried a number of spare parts such as topmasts, the lower masts, at up to one meter in diameter, were too large to carry spares. So a jury mast could be various things. Contemporary drawings and paintings show a wide variety of jury rigs, attesting to the creativity of sailors faced with the need to save their ships. Examples are

  • A spare topmast.
  • The main boom of a brig.
  • To replace the foremast with the mizzenmast: mentioned in W. Brady's The Kedge Anchor (1852),
  • The bowsprit set upright and tied to the stump of the real mast.

The Jury mast knot is often mentioned as a method to provide the anchor points for securing makeshift stays and shrouds to the new mast. However, there is a lack of hard evidence regarding its actual historical use.[1] Ships always carried a variety of spare sails, so rigging the jury mast once erected was mostly a matter of selecting appropriately sized spares.

Although ships were observed to perform reasonably well under jury rig, the rig was quite a bit weaker than the original, and the ship's first priority was normally to steer for the nearest friendly port and get replacement masts.

[edit] Similar forms

The term "jerry-rigged" is a relatively recent mingling (or perhaps garbling) of "jury rig" with "jerry-built".[2] The latter implies shoddy workmanship.[3] The term "Jimmy-rig" has also been used to denote an improvised repair.

[edit] References

  • John Harland, Seamanship in the Age of Sail (Naval Institute Press, 1984)
  1. ^ Charles Hamel, "Investigations on the Jury Mast Knot" [1] [2] [3] Accessed 2007-02-22.
  2. ^ WORD COURT ARCHIVES March 10, 2004 Accessed 2007-03-11
  3. ^ "'jerry-built'/'jury-rigged'". alt.usage.english Word Origins FAQ. Accessed 2006-05-25.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


Sails, Spars and Rigging
Sails
Course | Driver | Extra | Genoa | Gennaker | Jib | Lateen | Mainsail | Moonsail | Royal | Spanker | Spinnaker | Spritsail | Staysail | Studding | Tallboy | Topgallant | Topsail | Trysail
Sail anatomy and materials
Clew | Foot | Head | Leech | Luff | Roach | Tack | Dacron | Kevlar | Twaron
Spars
Boom | Bowsprit | Fore-mast | Gaff | Jackstaff | Jigger-mast | Jury Rig | Main-mast | Mast | Mizzen-mast | Masthead Truck | Spinnaker Pole | Yard
Rigging components
Backstay | Block | Boom vang | Braces | Buntlines | Cleat | Clevis Pin | Clewlines | Cunningham | Downhaul | Forestay | Gasket | Gooseneck | Guy | Halyard | Outhaul | Parrell beads | Peak | Preventer | Ratlines | Rigging (Running) | Shackle | Rigging (Standing) | Sheet | Shroud | Stay mouse | Stays | Throat | Topping lift | Trapeze