MathiasW
Well-Known Member
I have been suggesting in the past here that it may be safer to anchor in deeper water when there is a lot of swell and gusts, provided the swell and gusts at the deeper anchorage are not worse. The reason for this advice was that chain is extremely poor at absorbing shock loads when you are in shallow water.
I also said that this scenario can be remedied when using very good snubbers or bridles that can stretch by a metre or more in high wind loads. (So, they need to be substantially longer than the 1 metre snubbers one only too often sees - those cannot stretch by 1 metre without snapping.)
Now I have been working on the scenario of a mix of chain and rope. As one might expect, it is very similar to the case with a very long snubber. As long as the chain is not too long, the rope will dominate and the only function the chain has is to keep the rope off the seabed (to avoid chafing). The chain will operate in its shallow water mode and so not contribute anything to relief shock loads, as it cannot store energy. The rope will take most of it.
Given this, when using a mix of rope and chain, it does not make much sense to add a lot of chain. It will not improve things substantially and only lead to a larger swinging radius. So, once the chain is long enough to keep the rope off the seabed, its purpose is achieved.
With this result, it is also clear that with a mix of rope and chain there is no reason to relocate to deeper water, as can be the case with a pure chain. On the contrary. In deeper water the pulling angle of the rope will increase and thus reduce the maximum holding power of the anchor.
To conclude, folks with only chain will tend to be safer in deeper water, as long as swell and gusts are not worse there, whilst folks with a mix of chain and rope will want to seek more shallow water.
Cheers, Mathias
www.anchorchaincalculator.com
I also said that this scenario can be remedied when using very good snubbers or bridles that can stretch by a metre or more in high wind loads. (So, they need to be substantially longer than the 1 metre snubbers one only too often sees - those cannot stretch by 1 metre without snapping.)
Now I have been working on the scenario of a mix of chain and rope. As one might expect, it is very similar to the case with a very long snubber. As long as the chain is not too long, the rope will dominate and the only function the chain has is to keep the rope off the seabed (to avoid chafing). The chain will operate in its shallow water mode and so not contribute anything to relief shock loads, as it cannot store energy. The rope will take most of it.
Given this, when using a mix of rope and chain, it does not make much sense to add a lot of chain. It will not improve things substantially and only lead to a larger swinging radius. So, once the chain is long enough to keep the rope off the seabed, its purpose is achieved.
With this result, it is also clear that with a mix of rope and chain there is no reason to relocate to deeper water, as can be the case with a pure chain. On the contrary. In deeper water the pulling angle of the rope will increase and thus reduce the maximum holding power of the anchor.
To conclude, folks with only chain will tend to be safer in deeper water, as long as swell and gusts are not worse there, whilst folks with a mix of chain and rope will want to seek more shallow water.
Cheers, Mathias
www.anchorchaincalculator.com

