noelex
Well-Known Member
I note you are unable to support your contention that a large anchor, particularly a Mantus can be used at short scope ratios.
The "contention" that a larger anchor will hold at a shorter scope is just common sense. A larger anchor has a greater holding power than a smaller anchor of the same design, but an anchor at shorter scope has lower holding power than the same anchor deployed with a longer scope. The above is universally acknowledged apart from in very unusual substrates such as solid rock.
It is always sensible to anchor on as long a scope as practical, consistent with not interfering unduly with the anchoring room of others and with the overall size of the swinging room available and the likely wind strength. Chain in the locker does no good. However, a larger anchor gives the ability to anchor securely at lower scopes in settled conditions and this opens up a number of anchoring possibilities that would otherwise be unavailable.
The legendary Steve Dashew has reported his experiences when anchoring with large Rocna anchors much better than I could, so read his thoughts on the subject. He reports regularly using very short scopes to be able to squeeze his large boats into small anchorages. He uses very large anchors in relation to the size and windage of the boat.
Quote:
"Short Scope Anchoring:
While this high spec gear is designed for adverse conditions it has one big advantage in every day use, you can anchor on much shorter scope." End quote
It is also worth reading the thoughts of Beth Leonard and Evans Starzinger aboard Hawk. They used the same sized anchors in an almost an identically sized aluminium yacht to my previous yacht. Their experiences mirror my own showing that going up in anchor size by one or two steps has a positive benefit if you need to anchor on a shorter scope.