Evadne
Well-Known Member
If I wanted to lay a mooring in that sort of depth, I'd say the conventional way would be ~8mm wire attached to a clump of chain, usually about a half ton. The wire is better than rope because (a) it won't twist and kink and (b) it offers less cross sectional area to the current. I mention this because it is the sort of thing that is done regularly, so its a known starting point. Knowing the current is the key to working out the "knockdown" a surface buoy would suffer. The forces on the rode in any current are probably going to exceed anything that the boat will apply. There are programs to calculate this sort of thing, but is not really my area of expertise, I only know enough to bullshit a little and tell you what I've done and seen done. (this is SB and not R2R after all
).
For anchoring a boat, you are going to try and achieve zero knockdown. Obviously. You are also not worried about where the boat ends up relative to the anchor, so can put out a reasonable catenary. You will probably be anchoring in stiff mud (pelagic sediment), so a big plough or bruce should hold. 600m of anything is going to be hauled in mechanically, the weight will be quite significant. I would still be inclined towards 600m of wire on a drum or small portable winch, unless you are really sure that there are no currents down there. Otherwise you mite end up letting it all go rather than risk dragging the boat under once the anchor has bitten. It also takes up a lot less room. If you are doing it as an experiment, it might be worth putting it all out with a big mooring buoy (48") on the top and tying up to that. That way, if recovery proves impossible, at least you could get to use the mooring again.
For anchoring a boat, you are going to try and achieve zero knockdown. Obviously. You are also not worried about where the boat ends up relative to the anchor, so can put out a reasonable catenary. You will probably be anchoring in stiff mud (pelagic sediment), so a big plough or bruce should hold. 600m of anything is going to be hauled in mechanically, the weight will be quite significant. I would still be inclined towards 600m of wire on a drum or small portable winch, unless you are really sure that there are no currents down there. Otherwise you mite end up letting it all go rather than risk dragging the boat under once the anchor has bitten. It also takes up a lot less room. If you are doing it as an experiment, it might be worth putting it all out with a big mooring buoy (48") on the top and tying up to that. That way, if recovery proves impossible, at least you could get to use the mooring again.