craigsmith
Well-Known Member
Ok. "Utra" isn't an NZ company, but there is an Australian distributor/importer that dba that name. (Website). The Ultra anchor, for what it's worth, is a Spade copy, manufactured by a Turkish outfit called Boyut Marine. (Website). Similarly their swivel is a ball-and-socket design, essentially a copy of the WASI PowerBall (again Google to see for yourself). If you look at the 1st (Australian) site, they claim the products are "made in Europe" - bit of a stretch to lump Turkey in there but I guess Australians don't care about the sensibilities of political conservatives in the EU 
I don't like the fact that the manufacturer is an imitator - for an anchor I wouldn't go near their Spade copy, as opposed to a genuine Spade. However I don't have any reason to impugn their swivel, but I haven't seen any independent proof testing of it either. Where is the certification for the 12,000 kgf break figure you quote. Remember this is a Turkish outfit, not NZ/Australian or EU / US. Has the chandlery tested it themselves? Nb. I am not trying to say it is untrue, but I have seen a lot of stamped numbers on bits of steel of dubious origin that don't mean much when it comes to the crunch. You must trust the manufacturer.
This is the Ultra swivel:
This is the original WASI PowerBall:
They (Ultra) refer to the swivel as a "flip" swivel, which I can say categorically is nonsense. It will not do what the Osculati Twist does, which is their implication. The anchor will (or won't) right itself once on the roller, the swivel only allows this to happen a bit more easily without twisting chain (whereas the Osculati itself turns the anchor before it gets to the roller).
More fundamentally I don't like the ball-and-socket configuration, i.e. the WASI idea. It is still designed to attach directly to the anchor, meaning the forks can and will be laterally loaded, trying to open them up. See the photo above for why attaching to the anchor is a bad idea. The 12,000 kgf breaking strength quoted for the Ultra is an in-line pull only... load it up sideways with severe shock loads, 1:1 scope, trying to break out a fouled anchor in surge, that is how you bust such swivels. The articulating swivel joint does not help this issue... and 30 degrees is not enough to remove for sure the possibility of laterally loading the swivel joint itself (you can't make a 90 degree ball-and-socket for obvious reasons). You can of course just put a shackle between it and the anchor, but then what is the point of the ball-and-socket.
I would look at the Osculati if that righting action is what you want, otherwise more simple in-line designs. The Kong is one example of a high quality (Italian) product from a reputable manufacturer (should still use a shackle between it and the anchor).
No affiliation with any of these companies or brands.
I don't like the fact that the manufacturer is an imitator - for an anchor I wouldn't go near their Spade copy, as opposed to a genuine Spade. However I don't have any reason to impugn their swivel, but I haven't seen any independent proof testing of it either. Where is the certification for the 12,000 kgf break figure you quote. Remember this is a Turkish outfit, not NZ/Australian or EU / US. Has the chandlery tested it themselves? Nb. I am not trying to say it is untrue, but I have seen a lot of stamped numbers on bits of steel of dubious origin that don't mean much when it comes to the crunch. You must trust the manufacturer.
This is the Ultra swivel:
This is the original WASI PowerBall:
They (Ultra) refer to the swivel as a "flip" swivel, which I can say categorically is nonsense. It will not do what the Osculati Twist does, which is their implication. The anchor will (or won't) right itself once on the roller, the swivel only allows this to happen a bit more easily without twisting chain (whereas the Osculati itself turns the anchor before it gets to the roller).
More fundamentally I don't like the ball-and-socket configuration, i.e. the WASI idea. It is still designed to attach directly to the anchor, meaning the forks can and will be laterally loaded, trying to open them up. See the photo above for why attaching to the anchor is a bad idea. The 12,000 kgf breaking strength quoted for the Ultra is an in-line pull only... load it up sideways with severe shock loads, 1:1 scope, trying to break out a fouled anchor in surge, that is how you bust such swivels. The articulating swivel joint does not help this issue... and 30 degrees is not enough to remove for sure the possibility of laterally loading the swivel joint itself (you can't make a 90 degree ball-and-socket for obvious reasons). You can of course just put a shackle between it and the anchor, but then what is the point of the ball-and-socket.
I would look at the Osculati if that righting action is what you want, otherwise more simple in-line designs. The Kong is one example of a high quality (Italian) product from a reputable manufacturer (should still use a shackle between it and the anchor).
No affiliation with any of these companies or brands.