A
Anonymous
Guest
Marking the anchor chain is a long-standing problem and subject of debate. Over the years the one thing that seems to be agreed is that the plastic inserts stay in place best and are clearly visible, compared with paint (that fades) and cable ties (which can break or catch hands). Another issue is how to mark the chain so you know the length out.
I thought I'd share with you my proposed system for an 85m chain. I propose to use red, green and yellow markers. I propose to mark the chain every 5 metres coded in base 3 where green has the value 1, red is 2 and yellow is zero. We will have three digits making the largest number available 222 base 3 = 26 decimal. We only need 85/5=17 decimal so we have plenty of room for a longer rode if ever required.
The codes can then be looked up or worked out in your head and the first few codes are:-
17 x 5m green-red-red
16 x5m green-red-green
15 x 5m green-red-yellow
and so on, until..
2 x 5m yellow-yellow-red
1 x 5m yellow-yellow-green
I think that it will work for me, given that I will be powering the chain down most of the time having fitted a power-down function on the windlass this season.
I thought I'd share with you my proposed system for an 85m chain. I propose to use red, green and yellow markers. I propose to mark the chain every 5 metres coded in base 3 where green has the value 1, red is 2 and yellow is zero. We will have three digits making the largest number available 222 base 3 = 26 decimal. We only need 85/5=17 decimal so we have plenty of room for a longer rode if ever required.
The codes can then be looked up or worked out in your head and the first few codes are:-
17 x 5m green-red-red
16 x5m green-red-green
15 x 5m green-red-yellow
and so on, until..
2 x 5m yellow-yellow-red
1 x 5m yellow-yellow-green
I think that it will work for me, given that I will be powering the chain down most of the time having fitted a power-down function on the windlass this season.