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Splice in anchor rode
Hi group,
My anchor rode consists of 100 feet of chain and 2 length of 200 ft of 5/8 lines spliced together. The splice is very long. At least 24 in. Is that splice ok?. I am concerned about how much strength is lost in it. I am not likely to ever need to use all the chain + 200 ft of line for anchoring but that line is also what I would use for the sea anchor if I ever had to use it. So should I just buy a new line all in one piece? Thanks, Jeannette |
#2
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Splice in anchor rode
Actually you have two splices in your rode--the two piece of line and the
chain to line splice. If you trust the chain to line splice, why not the long splice? -- Dennis Gibbons dkgibbons at optonline dot net "Jeannette" wrote in message ... Hi group, My anchor rode consists of 100 feet of chain and 2 length of 200 ft of 5/8 lines spliced together. The splice is very long. At least 24 in. Is that splice ok?. I am concerned about how much strength is lost in it. I am not likely to ever need to use all the chain + 200 ft of line for anchoring but that line is also what I would use for the sea anchor if I ever had to use it. So should I just buy a new line all in one piece? Thanks, Jeannette |
#3
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Splice in anchor rode
On Thu, 03 Jun 2004 06:06:47 GMT, Jeannette
wrote: Hi group, My anchor rode consists of 100 feet of chain and 2 length of 200 ft of 5/8 lines spliced together. The splice is very long. At least 24 in. Is that splice ok?. I am concerned about how much strength is lost in it. I am not likely to ever need to use all the chain + 200 ft of line for anchoring but that line is also what I would use for the sea anchor if I ever had to use it. So should I just buy a new line all in one piece? Thanks, Jeannette Bump loads stress lines most. Anchor rodes shed bumps quite well. And a good splice, especially a long splice is stronger than the bight. Brian W |
#4
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Splice in anchor rode
Jeannette wrote:
My anchor rode consists of 100 feet of chain and 2 length of 200 ft of 5/8 lines spliced together. The splice is very long. At least 24 in. Is that splice ok?. I am concerned about how much strength is lost in it. A number of the standard references give estimates of what happens to the breaking strength of various types of cordage when they are tied or spliced. Many knots, bends, and hitches result in significant weakening compared to the untied cordage. A properly made splice, on the other hand, usually results in a decrease in the neighborhood of 10%. I am quoting from memory and I may be off a little, so I advise you to check the original references (Ashley, Brian Toss, etc.) I have a setup that's similar to yours with one major exception. There are 5 or 6 rodes, and each has an eye splice in _both_ ends. The eye splice is built around a metal thimble of the appropriate size. The advantages are that the rodes can be handled, coiled, and stowed more conveniently than if the rode were a single piece 3 or 4 hundred feet long. More importantly, should it become necessary to use more than a single length, the individual "shots" (not quite the right terminology) can be assembled using heavy pin shackles. This is the same method used to secure the rope section of the rode to the chain section, and it's quite strong. Doing it this way also provides for those cases when several long mooring lines in the vicinity of 100 or so feet are required. -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://kerrydeare.home.comcast.net/ |
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