Anchoring - static or dynamic rope?

jimi

Well-known member
Joined
19 Dec 2001
Messages
28,660
Location
St Neots
Visit site
I've got loads of old climbing rope, is that any use as anchor warp or is the stretch contracting going to act as a powerband to rip out the anchor?
 

prv

Well-known member
Joined
29 Nov 2009
Messages
37,361
Location
Southampton
Visit site
People generally use nylon for anchor warps, which is stretchy. I have seen one article which talked about the spring effect as a possible issue, but generally there doesn't seem to be a problem.

Pete
 

jdc

Well-known member
Joined
1 Dec 2007
Messages
2,033
Location
Falmouth
Visit site
Stretch is good, but climbing rope dubious

I think stretch in an anchor warp is pretty much always a good thing in that it minimises peak force on the anchor. Indeed this is the argument in favor of mixed rode (ie chain + warp) over all-chain.

However I'm very skeptical that climbing ropes are at all suitable for anchoring.

1. Breaking strain. The breaking strain of dynamic climbing ropes is usually in the region 7 - 10kN (see for instance mammut 10mm 'super-dry'). Compare this to 10mm anchor plait from English Braids which is 24kN, and the more usual 14mm dia is 38kN. I think you need > 10kN for anything over 24' or so.

2. Longevity. Climbing ropes are tested for a little greater than 10 falls (eg 13) and you are recommended to replace them after 7 or so. These are your old ones I guess, so already past the point at which they have guaranteed tensile strength. In contrast the design life of an anchor plait rope is probably 1000+ deployments.

3. Resistance to immersion. I don't know about your climbing ropes, but they are frequently hybrid construction with a sheath of polypropylene or polyester or at least some fibre sailors are used to - but an inner core of a latex or synthetic stretchy material. This inner core has no established reliability when continuously submerged, let alone in salt water.
 

sarabande

Well-known member
Joined
6 May 2005
Messages
36,144
Visit site
shock absorbing is what counts, and it's the boat which will benefit from the surge, since the anchor should be relatively static.

I used climbing ropes in recovery of LandRovers before kinetic recovery systems came in. One negative feature is that sand and mud can work their way into the insides of a climbing rope, and potentially cause abrasive damage.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wuBkxUP2Aho&feature=related for a look at the newer systems.
 

fireball

New member
Joined
15 Nov 2004
Messages
19,453
Visit site
actually - better idea would be for cruising chute sheets - when a gust hits it automatically eases the sail ... cool ! :)
 

jimi

Well-known member
Joined
19 Dec 2001
Messages
28,660
Location
St Neots
Visit site
I think stretch in an anchor warp is pretty much always a good thing in that it minimises peak force on the anchor. Indeed this is the argument in favor of mixed rode (ie chain + warp) over all-chain.

However I'm very skeptical that climbing ropes are at all suitable for anchoring.

1. Breaking strain. The breaking strain of dynamic climbing ropes is usually in the region 7 - 10kN (see for instance mammut 10mm 'super-dry'). Compare this to 10mm anchor plait from English Braids which is 24kN, and the more usual 14mm dia is 38kN. I think you need > 10kN for anything over 24' or so.

Hi, I've been informed that the "breaking strain" is different from the "impact force" of a rope. The impact force is the figure listed on the rope package and is in the range you quoted. They is very different to "breaking strain" however. It is the max force which is transfered to gear/climber after the rope has done its job, not the force required to break the rope. The breaking load of a 10.5mm static rope would be around 2700KG (27kn) so i suspect a dynamic rope would be very similar
 

jwilson

Well-known member
Joined
22 Jul 2006
Messages
6,155
Visit site
I've got loads of old climbing rope, is that any use as anchor warp or is the stretch contracting going to act as a powerband to rip out the anchor?

It should certainly be strong enough for anchor warp for small yachts: you are probably looking at breaking strains of a couple of tons when new, and even allowing only 25% remaining strength for age and wear it should be more than half a ton. Most anchors will break out of the bottom well before that strain. I'm also sure the elasticity will be good.
 

Ubergeekian

Active member
Joined
23 Jun 2004
Messages
9,904
Location
Me: Castle Douglas, SW Scotland. Boats: Kirkcudbri
www.drmegaphone.com
shock absorbing is what counts, and it's the boat which will benefit from the surge, since the anchor should be relatively static.

Climbing ropes are designed to absorb energy by irrecoverable extension, on the grounds that wheeeeoooop (descending note on slide whistle is better than wheeeeboingboingboingboing. There are therefore very good at shock absorbing ... but not very often!
 

electrosys

New member
Joined
23 May 2009
Messages
2,413
Location
Boston - gateway to the North Sea (and bugger all
Visit site
I wouldn't have any problem using 'em on a small boat - say up to a couple of tons - use a rubber or nylon snubber if you're worried about excessive loads.

Sarabande's comments re: abrasion are valid, but also true for ropes of any similar construction. I'd also add that salt crystals don't do synthetic ropes any good, either.
 

Sybarite

Well-known member
Joined
7 Dec 2002
Messages
27,718
Location
France
Visit site
I've got loads of old climbing rope, is that any use as anchor warp or is the stretch contracting going to act as a powerband to rip out the anchor?

I would have thought that it has just the opposite effect. The elastic amortizes the snatch loads on the anchor.
 
Top