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* Wilbur Hubbard wrote, On 2/23/2007 6:04 PM:
However, ignore the amateurs that advise shackling the chain to the boat. It should be attached with a length of line, strong enough to hold the boat, accessible enough to cut with a knife if need be. What about boats that have all chain rodes? Are you proposing adding line to the end of an all chain rode? Absolutely, and for the reason Jeff mentioned. CWM You forgot the word "retarded". Jeff's reason is retarded. There is no reason to have a rope tail to cut. If you have chain rode you have a windlass. If you have a windlass you have a chain stopper. Either a stopper built into the windlass or a stopper forward of it on deck. Or preferably both. If you have the bitter end of the chain made fast below in the chain locker with a stainless steel shackle made fast to a padeye or eye bolt it is under no strain. If you should have to jettison the rode/anchor for emergency reasons it is far better to do so from the safety of the ships interior. Generally, should you have to part company with your ground tackle it will be under severe wind and wave conditions. It is generally not as safe on the bucking foredeck as it is inside the vessel. You could even severely cut yourself with the knife. You could even use a snap shackle in the chain locker if you thought a stainless steel screw shackle might be tough to unfasten. Be sure to buoy your rode before setting it free so you may retrieve it at a later time. The buoy should have the name of your ship on it. Its clear you learned all you know by reading old West Marine catalogs you found while dumpster diving. First, the is no guarantee you have a windlass, and a windlass does not imply a chain stopper. And the chain stopper will not automatically stop the chain from running out. And when the boat snubs up on shackle it will probably deform it just enough to make it impossible to unscrew by hand. Further, this nonsense about having to cut the line while hanging off the bow proves that you've never actually been on a boat. Obviously, the line would attach to the same spot you're saying to use with a shackle, so one could cut it from the same "safe location" that you could remove the shackle. The difference, of course, is that with rope you can cut where ever is convenient, with 100% certainly, and with a shackle there's a fair chance you'll need time and tools to get it undone. |