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#71
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On Thu, 20 May 2004 18:34:50 -0400, "Gene Kearns"
wrote: On Thu, 20 May 2004 08:20:46 -0400, Peter W. Meek wrote: On Wed, 19 May 2004 17:54:46 -0400, "Gene Kearns" wrote: pwmeek wrote: On adding chain to the rode: I like to have chain equal to the weight of the anchor. Unless you are anchoring in coral or some other abrasive bottom, six to ten feet is plenty, so you up the size of the chain to get the weight up. With a 25# danforth, use ten feet of 1/2" chain (overkill for strength, but about the right weight). If you are using this for the original 19' boat.... you certainly *will* be anchored.... Actually, that IS the rig I use on my 20' center console. I occasionally wish it were lighter, but not as often as I am glad I have it when I make a first-try set on hard clay in a 4 kt current. I usually find that only an inch or two of the flukes have penetrated into the clay when I retrieve. Once another boat, that failed in making a set, t-boned me (his side/my bow). On that retrieve, nearly 6" had dug in. Maybe not typical, but it's MY worst-case anchoring problem. A Danforth is absolutely the worst anchor you could be using if your conditions are clay. Danforth's are beautiful in sand and soft mud, but nearly useless in hard clay. I'd go for a lighter plow type anchor like a S-L Delta set-fast. Less back breaking work and more holding power. My Bruce works well in clay. Also works in mud and sand and just about everything. I have a CQR, Danforth and Bruce and just about always use the Bruce as the primary anchor. It sets and resets fast, holds well and is easy to break out. Steve |
#72
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and is easy to break out.
Steve the true test of an anchor. |
#73
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On Thu, 20 May 2004 18:34:50 -0400, "Gene Kearns"
wrote: I usually find that only an inch or two of the flukes have penetrated into the clay when I retrieve. Once another boat, that failed in making a set, t-boned me (his side/my bow). On that retrieve, nearly 6" had dug in. Maybe not typical, but it's MY worst-case anchoring problem. A Danforth is absolutely the worst anchor you could be using if your conditions are clay. Danforth's are beautiful in sand and soft mud, but nearly useless in hard clay. I'd go for a lighter plow type anchor like a S-L Delta set-fast. Less back breaking work and more holding power. My problem isn't holding power, it's making the set at all. I could probably use a grappling hook with a weight on the shank. I get plenty of holding power from the ***2 or 3 square inches*** of the tips of the flukes that dig in. I'm talking a glassy surface with slight undulations. I lower the anchor to the bottom and let out 7 or 8 to one scope with NO tension. Then I drag the anchor, holding the rode in my fingertips, feeling for the first catch, and then pull slightly harder, hoping that the tips are caught on one of the ripples. As I ease the tips into the clay I apply more tension until I think it will hold. At that point I can reduce scope to about 4 or 5 to 1. Then I cleat it off. Once a much larger boat (35'?) missed his set and drifted (at 4 kts) sideways down onto my bow. When he hit, I thought he would break my set, since I knew that only an inch or two of the tips were dug in. To my surprise, it held. When I pulled the anchor (with MUCH difficulty -- up and down, cleat it off, rock the boat, power back and forth) there was clay on only about 5 or 6 inches of the tips of the flukes. The clay has to be chipped off with a screw driver. It is much stiffer than cold plasticine (the green, oily modeling clay). I suspect that if I set a plow anchor there, I'd have to cut the line and leave it at the end of the day. This is at the north end of the channel that runs behind Belle Isle in the Detroit River. It is the location of the spectator fleet for the hydroplane races. Watching people try to anchor there is almost as much fun as a day at the public boat ramps. Much cutting of rodes by people who miss their sets and try to power out of a mess. And the usual gang of first timers who try to anchor with a mushroom and enough poly line to reach the 40' bottom. Every year one of these guys prepares to drop his mushroom about where someone else's anchor is dug in and has to be shouted off by the other boats anchored in the area. |
#74
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#75
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yup, an anchor that is easy to pull loose from the bottom, THAT is the best
choice of anchors. and is easy to break out. Steve the true test of an anchor. I wouldn't say the true test. But it's one of the many characteristics of a good anchor in addition to the ones you snipped, which include: My Bruce works well in clay. Also works in mud and sand and just about everything. [...] It sets and resets fast, holds well and is easy to break out. If an anchor is not easy to break out, I'd only be using it for either times when I plan to anchor for days or weeks on end and not just an overnight or two like I usually do or as a second anchor for when the wind kicks up. It would not be my primary anchor. Steve |
#76
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my goodness. what fine, fine sailors.
and is easy to break out. Steve the true test of an anchor. and easy retrieval is one of my prime considerations when choosing an anchor. and relatively inexpensive. why? I've lost a number of them over the years never heard of a trip line, eh? |
#77
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You finally got something right.
"JAXAshby" wrote in message ... yup, an anchor that is easy to pull loose from the bottom, THAT is the best choice of anchors. and is easy to break out. Steve the true test of an anchor. I wouldn't say the true test. But it's one of the many characteristics of a good anchor in addition to the ones you snipped, which include: My Bruce works well in clay. Also works in mud and sand and just about everything. [...] It sets and resets fast, holds well and is easy to break out. If an anchor is not easy to break out, I'd only be using it for either times when I plan to anchor for days or weeks on end and not just an overnight or two like I usually do or as a second anchor for when the wind kicks up. It would not be my primary anchor. Steve |
#78
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On 21 May 2004 14:54:04 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote:
what fine, fine sailors. Thank you for the compliment. Steve |
#79
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#80
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4# of tin foil is even easier to pull loose from the bottom, unless of course
you hang 400 feet of chain on it. Then it would take nearly a 9 knot wind to break it free. for the kristes sake guys. have you no clew on how to break out an anchor using the engine, or sails if your boat does not have a working engine? You finally got something right. "JAXAshby" wrote in message ... yup, an anchor that is easy to pull loose from the bottom, THAT is the best choice of anchors. and is easy to break out. Steve the true test of an anchor. I wouldn't say the true test. But it's one of the many characteristics of a good anchor in addition to the ones you snipped, which include: My Bruce works well in clay. Also works in mud and sand and just about everything. [...] It sets and resets fast, holds well and is easy to break out. If an anchor is not easy to break out, I'd only be using it for either times when I plan to anchor for days or weeks on end and not just an overnight or two like I usually do or as a second anchor for when the wind kicks up. It would not be my primary anchor. Steve |
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