Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Its not theanchor...................... its the bottom! Dont put the
cart in ront of the horse. Listen to the bottom and it will tell you what type ofanchorto use. This old lore of choosing the anchor by the bottom type is very out dated. Anchors should work in all bottoms, within reason, and if they don't there's something wrong with them. (Exceptions naturally are solid rock or coral, or the same with an impossibly thin layer of sand/ mud over the top. There you're just depending on dead weight - if you need to anchor securely, go somewhere else.) MBM, in their own write-up of the YM testing linked to above, wrote in their conclusion: "The new generation of roll-bar type anchors were a revelation. You don't see many of these stowed on bow-rollers in the UK, but they were truly impressive performers - especially the New Zealand-made Rocna... They showed extreme holding power and versatility, giving the established Spade and Fortress a run for their money. The anchors that performed best in our tests were the ones that self orientated themselves on the seabed with an optimum penetrating angle. So are new designs the way to go? It seems we are getting closer to an anchor that will cope with all types of seabeds, a universal all-rounder. So the days of the long-distance boater who carries two or three different anchors to cope with a variety of conditions may well soon be numbered." This is very perceptive, although the testers did not test in a huge variety of seabeds (only three) so they don't know how right they are! The Rocna, and to some degree the Spade, are superb general purpose anchors, equally as good as any "specialist" anchor in any seabed and superior in most. It is not necessary to carry two or three specialist types, each only good for one type of bottom, maybe to never be used. This approach stems simply from the fundamental flaws of the old types, with each anchor in such a collection only present in order to address the flaws of the others. In the data from SAIL, the "max before releasing" figures of the Rocna are almost unbelievably higher than the remainder of the field. The Spade, to its credit, is second. Refer: http://www.rocna.com/distributable/r...nd-testing.pdf The reason for this is NOT that the competing anchors ALWAYS perform that much worse than the Rocna. Rather, it is a function of consistency. The data is the average of all pull tests, and while some of the others may have performed quite well, recording competitive "peaks", they were not reliable enough to perform to the same high average on all occasions. When you're anchoring in different sea-bed types, and you don't always know the bottom, and you just need the anchor to set dependably - then this consistency of performance is the most critical characteristic. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Anchors | Cruising | |||
Lightweight Anchors | Cruising | |||
Anchors | General | |||
More Anchors! | ASA | |||
How many anchors ? | ASA |