Hi JamesToBoot
You bring up a good valid question!
I may be mistaken, and please feel free to correct me if I am, but pins and rings are the generally preferred option over bolts and self locking nuts on a lot of maritime applications mainly for the aspect that they work and work well without the need for tools. It reduces the items necessary to bring out on deck to adjust something.
The logic goes something like this:
I’m not saying that fiddling with a pin and a ring ding and a shroud adjuster on a bobbing boat is easy but it can be done… (generally with the ring ding pinched between the lips at one point of the process or other

…just don’t swallow

) whereas with a bolt and nut arrangement one will also have a wrench for the bolt AND a wrench for the nut so now you’ll have to contend with five loose objects on the bouncy boat deck instead of just three…. and we are still just at the dock, never mind out at sea…. Continuing that thought for a moment further consider what happens if you inadvertently “lose” one of the wrenches overboard… now what do you do? (While folks that have to work in hazard conditions often have their tools on lanyards attached to them this can get kind of awkward in practice even for experienced professionals.) Now try imagining the scenario being in pounding chop with blowing wind, spray, rain and in the dark and you’re gonna have to first go below deck to first find and select the appropriate wrenches before getting back up on deck to deal with the issue. A pin and clip you can do by feel alone without tools is beginning to look a lot better, eh?
Some enterprising folks have made pins with tootles, pins with spring ad toggles, pins with push button detent balls as well as pin and clip sets with a bit of wire or cable attaching the clip and pin together to reduce the number of ‘loose’ items to two…..(Not sure how that works with a ring ding) but you get the idea that the intent is to reduce the number of loose things that you will be contending with on the bouncy boat deck.
So, like a lot of things in life, there is some hard earned logic behind the use of pins and clips having a preference over bolts and nuts in maritime applications.
Many good maritime designers go to the effort to standardize what pins and clips they select for use on a vessel. This minimizes the need for unique spares and increases interchangeablity while standardizing operational procedures.
As always, It’s your boat so it’s your rules. Just be aware of the potential consequences of your choices for yourself and others into the future.
Best Regards,
Over Easy
