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On 2007-09-08 14:00:14 -0400, jeff said:
For instance, invoking the very concept the "catenary" is pedantic and not relevant to practical anchoring. The problem is that once a chain has completely assumed the catenary shape, it is virtually fully extended and about to be broken out. The purpose of an all chain rode or a kellet is to minimize the catenary and keep as much of the rode as possible sitting on the bottom. Oops! You got catenary backwards: Catenary: "a curve formed by a wire, rope, or chain hanging freely from two points that are on the same horizontal level." (okay, the two points on an anchor aren't on the same horizontal level, but you get the idea.) When the chain *loses* it's catenary, it's fully extended and the stress on the anchor is substantial. Also, I find it most useful to have an anchor of a different type than the primary for short-distance cruising. -- Jere Lull Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's new pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI pages: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
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