PaulGooch
Well-Known Member
CQR pattern anchor, 20m of 8mm chain and 140m of 14mm rope. 27 foot boat, anchored all day for angling, including a 180° swing with the turn of the tide.
I find depth of water matters for two reason, the first is the obvious one. Say i'm in 150' of water, neap tides i often get away with 2-2.5 times the depth, springs need 3 times the depth. NEVER had to let any more out and i've anchored in strong strong tidal flows.
Second reason depth matters, if i was in 20 feet of water, 40 feet of chain won't hold. 60 feet might if the tidal flow isn't too much. But, let all the chain out and a little rope, you couldn't tow it loose with a tug. I reckon the reason for this lies in Haydn's theory that the chain does most of the work. 20m of chain lying flat on the seabed of gonna take some dragging. Not only that, it's gonna take some lifting, so it's mostly going to stay on the bottom and keep the anchor stock pulling parallel with the bottom.
I find depth of water matters for two reason, the first is the obvious one. Say i'm in 150' of water, neap tides i often get away with 2-2.5 times the depth, springs need 3 times the depth. NEVER had to let any more out and i've anchored in strong strong tidal flows.
Second reason depth matters, if i was in 20 feet of water, 40 feet of chain won't hold. 60 feet might if the tidal flow isn't too much. But, let all the chain out and a little rope, you couldn't tow it loose with a tug. I reckon the reason for this lies in Haydn's theory that the chain does most of the work. 20m of chain lying flat on the seabed of gonna take some dragging. Not only that, it's gonna take some lifting, so it's mostly going to stay on the bottom and keep the anchor stock pulling parallel with the bottom.