How to Choose the Right Rigging Hardware for Your Application
Author: Hayn Enterprises | Series: Expertise / Subject Matter Experts | Reading Time: ~6 min
"The right rigging hardware isn't always the heaviest, the most expensive, or the most commonly specified. It's the one that's correct for your specific application."
Why Specification Matters More Than Brand
The most important rigging hardware decision you make is not which brand to choose — it's whether the specified hardware is appropriate for the actual load case, usage pattern, and environment it will see. A well-manufactured fitting that is undersized for the application will fail. A correctly sized fitting from a reputable manufacturer that is installed without proper toggle alignment will fail. Specification and installation quality trump brand loyalty every time.
The expertise Hayn has built over 75 years is, at its core, the ability to help people specify correctly. Not to sell the most units, but to match the right hardware to the right application — because we know that a well-specified installation is one that doesn't call us about an emergency re-rig.
Understanding the Load Case
The starting point for any hardware specification is the actual load the fitting will see. For standing rigging, this means knowing the design tension for each stay, the expected dynamic loads from sailing conditions and rig dynamics, and whether the application is cruising (moderate loads, long intervals), charter (higher cycle count, moderate peak loads), or racing (high tensions, extreme dynamics).
A cruising sailor who specifies hardware to racing standards is over-specifying and over-spending. A charter operator who uses cruising-duty hardware on a high-cycle-count fleet is under-specifying and creating a failure risk. The load case is the foundation.
Wire vs. Rod: The First Decision
For most marine applications, the first hardware choice is between wire rigging and rod rigging. The decision turns on several factors:
- Stretch and tune: Rod rigging has dramatically lower stretch than wire. For performance-oriented rigs where consistent tune matters, rod is often preferred. Wire's elasticity can be managed with appropriate tensioning but is a characteristic of the material.
- Weight: Rod rigging is lighter than wire of equivalent strength. On performance vessels where weight aloft matters, this is a meaningful advantage.
- Inspection and replacement: Wire shows fatigue visually (broken strands, bird-caging). Rod does not — rod must be replaced on a time/cycle basis rather than on condition. This changes the maintenance program.
- Cost and availability: Wire rigging is more widely serviced. Rod rigging work requires specific tooling (a heading machine for the end fittings) and a supply chain for rod-specific hardware. Hayn's Navtec-made-by-Hayn rod rigging line addresses that supply chain need.
- Swage terminals (Hayn's primary marine offering) are the strongest and most streamlined option for permanently installed standing rigging. They require a swaging machine for installation and cannot be assembled by hand.
- Mechanical compression terminals offer hand-assembly without special tools. Trade-off is slightly lower break strength relative to wire and a larger profile.
- Threaded end fittings (turnbuckle connections, toggle jaws) are the adjustable elements of the system — they allow rig tension to be set and adjusted. These are not alternatives to terminals; they are the fittings the terminals connect to.
Matching Fitting Type to Application
Within wire rigging hardware, the selection of fitting type — swage terminal, mechanical terminal, threaded fitting — also matters:
When to Call Hayn
The applications where we most often receive calls are the ones that don't fit neatly into the catalog: unusual chainplate geometry, non-standard wire diameters, metric thread requirements on older European boats, or structural applications that require documentation and load data we can provide.
We also get calls from riggers working on boats where the original rigging is no longer available from the original supplier — a common occurrence as the industry consolidates and products are discontinued. In many of those situations, we can supply a matching or equivalent fitting, often with the same or shorter lead time as a catalog item.
The conversation starts the same way every time: describe what you have, what you need, and what the application is. We take it from there.
"Specification and installation quality trump brand loyalty every time. The right hardware for your application is the one that's actually correct for your load case — not the one that's most commonly specified."
About Hayn: Hayn Enterprises has been engineering and manufacturing marine, architectural, and industrial rigging hardware in Rocky Hill, Connecticut since 1950. Hayn's Navtec-Made-by-Hayn rod rigging products are manufactured to the same quality standards in the same Connecticut facility. Learn more at hayn.com or call (860) 257-0680.
