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  #31   Report Post  
JAXAshby
 
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Default What anchor should I buy?

Rope. In all of his millennia handling boats, he uses rope.

that is the term used by boaters in the context of the Sea-Ray owner's
question.

"line" is fishing line, "rope" is anchor rope.
  #32   Report Post  
JAXAshby
 
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Default What anchor should I buy?

billie, you spend too much time in the bathtub playing with the "ducky" and not
enough time on the water.

Put 8-10' of 1/4" to 5/16" galvanized
chain between the anchor and 3/8" anchor line / rope.


in all my years in and around boats on Midwest lakes, I never saw, nor

ever
heard of, using chain on an anchor. Not once. You tie the rope to the
mushroom and drop it overboard.


You ain't seen much. First you do not use rope on an anchor. And if there
is wind, on a lake, you want the chain to help get the anchor to set. Try
Okeechobee. I bet the wind can blow bit time there.










  #33   Report Post  
Eisboch
 
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Default What anchor should I buy?


"JAXAshby" wrote in message
...
Rope. In all of his millennia handling boats, he uses rope.


that is the term used by boaters in the context of the Sea-Ray owner's
question.

"line" is fishing line, "rope" is anchor rope.


Try anchor rode.

Eisboch

  #34   Report Post  
Peter W. Meek
 
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Default What anchor should I buy?

On Sun, 16 May 2004 17:19:56 GMT, Peggie Hall
wrote:

The minimum scope (length of anchor
line) should be at least 3x the water's depth...so in 15' of water,
you'd need to put out at least 45' of anchor line.


Measure the "depth" from where the anchor rode
meets the boat. If your chock or cleat is 3'
above the water, the effective depth would be
18' in 15' of true depth. This makes much more
difference in shallow water than in deep water.

And as Peggie says, 3x is the minimum -- good
weather, little wind or current, and someone
keeping an eye on things at all times. If you
want to relax or leave the boat for a while,
you need more scope than that.

  #35   Report Post  
Gould 0738
 
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Default What anchor should I buy?

"JAXAshby" wrote in message
...
Rope. In all of his millennia handling boats, he uses rope.


that is the term used by boaters in the context of the Sea-Ray owner's
question.

"line" is fishing line, "rope" is anchor rope.


Try anchor rode.

Eisboch



Acch!

You're all right, sort of.

"Rope" is a proper term for certain types of cordage aboard a boat.
Technically, it is supposed to apply to cordage that is 1" or more in diameter,
with lesser sizes considered "small stuff", or "twine". Nobody in 2004 uses the
term "small stuff" on a pleasure boat, and we all think of "twine" as something
you use to wrap a parcel or lash a Christmas tree to the roof of the family
station wagon. Rope works.
The guy who refers to unemployed cordage
as "rope" isn't lubberly- it's the white slacks, blue blazer, yacht clubber
gripping the champagne flute with an extended pinky finger and feigning disgust
whenever anybody uses the term "rope" that
displays ignorance on the topic.

When rope is put to work, it can become a "line." It can be a bow line, a stern
line, a spring line, a breast line, etc.
But rope can work without being a line of any type. It can be a halyard, a
lashing, a bell rope, or any number of things not properly considered a "line."

An achor rode is the rope, chain, cable, or combination thereof that connects
vessel to anchor.




  #37   Report Post  
Gould 0738
 
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Default What anchor should I buy?

Now I understand.

Rope is the stuuf you use to make knots...


Hmmm.......

A guy who hangs on every phrase that Limbaugh speaks is a ditto head.

A guy who smoke pot is a pothead.

So, what's a guy who is hung up on knots?

:-)
  #39   Report Post  
Calif Bill
 
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Default What anchor should I buy?

It is not a rope on the boat, it is a line, and when it is attached to the
anchor, it becomes a rode.
Bill

"Peggie Hall" wrote in message
...
Calif Bill wrote:

You ain't seen much. First you do not use rope on an anchor.


According to whom???? Or do you only mean that rope shouldn't be
connected directly to the anchor?

I'd guess that 99% of small powerboat anchor lines are rope...and very
few of 'em have any chain between the anchor and the rode. Not that it
isn't a good idea...they just don't have any.

The major mistake many of 'em make is in just tying the line onto the
anchor with a unidentifiable mess that doesn't even come close to
resembling any recognized knot instead of using a thimble and a shackle.

--
Peggie
----------
Peggie Hall
Specializing in marine sanitation since 1987
Author "Get Rid of Boat Odors - A Guide To Marine Sanitation Systems and
Other Sources of Aggravation and Odor"
http://69.20.93.241/store/customer/p...40&cat=&page=1



  #40   Report Post  
Calif Bill
 
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Default What anchor should I buy?

At least I get to water.

"JAXAshby" wrote in message
...
billie, you spend too much time in the bathtub playing with the "ducky"

and not
enough time on the water.

Put 8-10' of 1/4" to 5/16" galvanized
chain between the anchor and 3/8" anchor line / rope.

in all my years in and around boats on Midwest lakes, I never saw, nor

ever
heard of, using chain on an anchor. Not once. You tie the rope to the
mushroom and drop it overboard.


You ain't seen much. First you do not use rope on an anchor. And if

there
is wind, on a lake, you want the chain to help get the anchor to set.

Try
Okeechobee. I bet the wind can blow bit time there.












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