Neeves
Well-Known Member
Thanks Barnacle,
Nice cross section
Jonathan
Nice cross section
Jonathan
Well, I have just ploughed through this thread (pun intended) and find it quite interesting. The last time I read an anchor thread was during the great Rochna debate of yesteryear. I use an old CQR on my 28' wooden honeybee and have had no problems so far but feel a little concerned by the general trend here. I don't find it hard to set and have never dragged even in quite severe conditions. I am going to replace my chain this season as it has rusted away and now I wonder if an anchor is required. I sail on the West coast of Scotland. I have never had trouble retrieving the CQR and maybe this is a bad sign. Perhaps I have been lucky and need a new anchor to remain safe or perhaps I should stick with the status quo since it has worked thus far.
Well, I have just ploughed through this thread (pun intended) and find it quite interesting. The last time I read an anchor thread was during the great Rochna debate of yesteryear. I use an old CQR on my 28' wooden honeybee and have had no problems so far but feel a little concerned by the general trend here. I don't find it hard to set and have never dragged even in quite severe conditions. I am going to replace my chain this season as it has rusted away and now I wonder if an anchor is required. I sail on the West coast of Scotland. I have never had trouble retrieving the CQR and maybe this is a bad sign. Perhaps I have been lucky and need a new anchor to remain safe or perhaps I should stick with the status quo since it has worked thus far.
Y'know, sometimes - just sometimes - there's a gleam of common sense through the swirling clouds of cant and confusion that are our 'anchor threads'......![]()
Whilst I agree in part with the poster who stated that an anchor can never be too good, I would temper the statement by adding that it only needs to be good enough, plus a bit. .
After the apparent concern expressed on this forum over bendy anchors and the costs incurred in using high tensile steel for the shanks of some anchors it must be most frustrating for these (quality) anchor makers to see so many buying anchors with bendy steel, or to no known steel specification.
It seems that a segment of the yachting population endorse low specification safety products and yet again:
As a proportion of yacht cost and the value they secure, even good anchors are cheap
and
On a cost per night basis quality anchors are also cheap
Do people buy lifejackets, harnesses on the basis of lowest cost as well?
Jonathan
I haven't seen any mention of Kobra shanks bending during the tests in which they displayed holding power second only to the Manson Supreme. If it's bendy and it holds, surely it will bend?
For me, the Kobra is a lot better than the pattern CQR my boat came with, fits on the roller, has been shown to be the close second best available in terms of holding power, has been shown to be the best available in terms of setting and self-resetting, and cost £99 instead of £350.
I'm not sure where you think I've compromised. I could have paid three and a half times as much and got nothing at all more for another £250 of my cash, except the fun of having to modify the bow roller and pulpit.
Technique in setting has little relevance when you are sleeping in an anchorage where either the tide turns or a strong wind arrives from a different quadrant to the one previously lying to. The anchor breaks out and has to reset itself. A new generation anchor does that in a short distance. A CQR does not have the same attribute in many cases.I wonder if much of the failure of CQR anchors is down to the technique required to get them to set.
Dare I remind you of your own argument elsewhere with reference to those who have witnessed water divining and would not accept that their personal experience was not of sufficient scientific robustness?Some of the scientific tests appear conclusive but once again they do not match my experience of a CQR working well.