GHA
Well-Known Member
Thinking tall and skinny is better than low and fat to stop the chain jamming? And is there by any chance a formula for space needed for 60m of 10mm chain?
TIA
TIA
At the moment mine just goes straight into the forepeak, tends to form a hill a bit but not quite as bad as that, once in a while on a rough passage it can fall over which is a pain to unravel single handed so thinking a thinner space will mean it can only fall a little and not jam,,, guessing a bit though.. as ever
There are formulae for chain weight and volume. I thought it was in Nicholson’s Boat Data Book but it isn’t so it must be in Skene’s Elements - “loan oft loses both itself and friend”... so I draw a blank.
I agree. I have divided my chain locker with a stainless plate which sits across the narrower forward part and forward of which I Stow my first 30m of 10mm chain. The remaining 40 m thus has more height available to fall into from the windlass. 40 m is enough for most occasions but the rest can easily be pulled back into use if necessary. It just then needs to be stowed forward again after use.I'm sure that tall and narrow is an ideal to strive for, but realistically on a small to medium yacht, vertical height between the gypsy and the top of the pile of chain, is difficult to achieve.
To say that the chain locker needs to be "both deep and wide/broad" is a bit of a cop out.
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Barry Neilson, owner of Sailing Holidays, wrote an article on the subject, in YM a couple of years ago. Some of his boats have chain lockers extended downwards, a modification carried out by themselves, to avoid the need for inexperienced punters to shift chain when anchoring, a potentially hazardous operation.
Visions of a "blister" extending out of the hull.![]()
So what rectangular footprint works with 10mm chain anyone?
Tia
Having just had my 62m of 10mm chain regalvanised, I can tell you that it fills approximately 300mm of a standard 40 gallon oil drum. You can calculate the volume from that, but chain dropping into a locker may not stow itself quite as carefully.![]()