boomerangben
Well-Known Member
I’ve always wondered what the long term (a few days of rough weather) effect a lifting rode (ie one that comes off the sea bed right to the anchor shackle) has on the screw pin shackle at the anchor. Depending on which way round you install the shackle, there will be a tendency for the (small) rotating effect of friction as the shackle lifts and drop to either tighten or slacken the pin. I suppose if it was a significant concern, yachts would lose their anchors more frequently.
Bolt types are certainly much easier to install in my experience. The means of securing the nut is the down side. But at least the pin is allowed to rotate and the load on the nut relatively small but there may be a (smaller) tendency for it to be unscrewed by long term use. IIRC they are slightly stronger and better at dealing with asymmetric loading (which could well happen at an anchor).
I think I would prefer to leave the split pin hole in place and find a user friendly means of securing the nut that doesn’t catch on anything (I think it might be as simple as galvanised nail or fence wire bent into a circular shape - not very yachty but I’m more agricultural in my solutions!). But the over riding factor is the clearance at the bow roller and how comfortable skippers feel about how small 3/4 and 1te shackles are - they simply don’t look big enough so the natural tendency is to unnecessarily up size.
Having said all this, most boats seem to do very nicely with a screw pin D shackle, moused or otherwise.
Bolt types are certainly much easier to install in my experience. The means of securing the nut is the down side. But at least the pin is allowed to rotate and the load on the nut relatively small but there may be a (smaller) tendency for it to be unscrewed by long term use. IIRC they are slightly stronger and better at dealing with asymmetric loading (which could well happen at an anchor).
I think I would prefer to leave the split pin hole in place and find a user friendly means of securing the nut that doesn’t catch on anything (I think it might be as simple as galvanised nail or fence wire bent into a circular shape - not very yachty but I’m more agricultural in my solutions!). But the over riding factor is the clearance at the bow roller and how comfortable skippers feel about how small 3/4 and 1te shackles are - they simply don’t look big enough so the natural tendency is to unnecessarily up size.
Having said all this, most boats seem to do very nicely with a screw pin D shackle, moused or otherwise.
