Bajansailor
Well-Known Member
There is an excellent thread on here started by Jimmy Le Constructeur about moving his boat to France, and (as usual) there was a bit of fred drift re anchor chains and catenarys (catenaries?) - JFM suggested starting another thread for those who wanted to continue with this debate, so as no one else has, I will......
I am sitting on the fence here, and will get one of those proverbial packets of pop corn that seem to crop up occasionally whenever a good scrap is expected.....
But just thinking it through, if you have some light chain on your dinghy anchor rope, it really does not do very much in terms of a catenary as it is so light - it is easy to straighten it out, and its main purpose is probably just to avoid the rope near the anchor from getting chafed.
Going to the opposite extreme now, if we consider a large ship (or any ship in fact), it is obvious that the weight of their cables do form an important part of their anchoring effectiveness. Take this right up to super tankers or the 12,000 TEU Maersk container ships, and the anchors are tiny in comparison to ship - they wouldn't hold much if you tried to anchor a ship on one with just a rope.
I have read about how ships have been at anchor in storms with lots of scope out, and when divers inspected the anchors afterwards, found them just resting on the sea bed, with slack in the cable, ie it was just the weight of the cables (and the friction on the sea bed) that was holding them.
So, I think the effect of chain catenary and weight is probably on a sliding scale, from negligible for a very light chain on a dinghy anchor, to very significant on a super tanker. You just have to decide where you are in between..........
I am sitting on the fence here, and will get one of those proverbial packets of pop corn that seem to crop up occasionally whenever a good scrap is expected.....
But just thinking it through, if you have some light chain on your dinghy anchor rope, it really does not do very much in terms of a catenary as it is so light - it is easy to straighten it out, and its main purpose is probably just to avoid the rope near the anchor from getting chafed.
Going to the opposite extreme now, if we consider a large ship (or any ship in fact), it is obvious that the weight of their cables do form an important part of their anchoring effectiveness. Take this right up to super tankers or the 12,000 TEU Maersk container ships, and the anchors are tiny in comparison to ship - they wouldn't hold much if you tried to anchor a ship on one with just a rope.
I have read about how ships have been at anchor in storms with lots of scope out, and when divers inspected the anchors afterwards, found them just resting on the sea bed, with slack in the cable, ie it was just the weight of the cables (and the friction on the sea bed) that was holding them.
So, I think the effect of chain catenary and weight is probably on a sliding scale, from negligible for a very light chain on a dinghy anchor, to very significant on a super tanker. You just have to decide where you are in between..........