Neeves
Well-Known Member
I think we are just reading a slightly different meaning to shock loads. I am still considering them as (harmless) shock loads even if fully mitigated by weak and strong elastic combined snubber, whereas as your definition is that a fully absorbed shock load is not a shock load anymore. Your definition makes more sense but I don't now know what to call that mitigated shockload that (now) slowly tautens up the anchor chain and snubber and (now) slowly releases it.
I understand.
When I tested rode loads at short scope, less than 3:1 and with 35 knot winds - I knew what a shock load was - it was, well, shocking! It was as if I'd reversed the cat into a brick wall. As you increase the scope, or lengthen the rode - they do become less 'shocking' and if you use a snubber - they disappear, or they are still there but no longer shock. I think others are calling them dynamic loads.
With a snubber, or bridle I now see them rather than feel them - the snubber stretches out but its relatively gentle.
I 'feel' that the mechanism of stretch, the speed the stretch develops (and I think GHA has made mention - so maybe he thinks something similar but maybe has formed his ideas more firmly) and then releases is important. So, fine tuning, its not only elasticity - but more - but I'm not sure what - and feel I wittering more than usual!
Jonathan