thinwater
Well-Known Member
I though the OP and Crina had it dead on. New anchors are better. I had a Delta.
Some cruisers like to go massive. That's OK for them. Much depends on how often and where you anchor. If you expect to sit out a tropical storm on questionable holding ground, monster is good. If you anchor in very soft mud (Chesapeake Bay) and have strong thunderstorms, big is good, although standard Rocna sizing is conservative.
It's not about the money. Really. It's not about the weight, unless you carry a lot of over wieght chain.
Then there is the internet fear factor.
I've done a lot of testing for articles and a book. Perhaps the clearest lesson is that few anchors drag because they were overwhemed in good holding ground. There was always another factor, and that other factor reduced holding by 3-10 times. A 20-30% larger anchor won't solve that.
Unless the anchor is tragically undersized, it is not the reason you are dragging. My 2-pound Guardian will reliably hold 500 pounds (the wind load of a 38-foot boat in 30-35 knots) in good sand. A conventionally sized Rocna or Manson will hold well into huricane force.
But you can argue it to death, which I'm sure we will. How safe is safe? What are your anchoring bottoms like? How much care do you expend? How owten do you anchor? Do you anchor out in severe storms (winds over 50 knots, not just a lot of rain)? But rememmber, if you anchored on hardpan, an extra 15 pounds isn't going to make an important difference.
Some cruisers like to go massive. That's OK for them. Much depends on how often and where you anchor. If you expect to sit out a tropical storm on questionable holding ground, monster is good. If you anchor in very soft mud (Chesapeake Bay) and have strong thunderstorms, big is good, although standard Rocna sizing is conservative.
It's not about the money. Really. It's not about the weight, unless you carry a lot of over wieght chain.
Then there is the internet fear factor.
I've done a lot of testing for articles and a book. Perhaps the clearest lesson is that few anchors drag because they were overwhemed in good holding ground. There was always another factor, and that other factor reduced holding by 3-10 times. A 20-30% larger anchor won't solve that.
- Trash. The anchor fouled on a stick or shell. Or perhaps the chain fouled, preventing digging.
- Soft spot.
- Weeds. The anchor caught on weeds, but broke loose when it really blew.
- Underlying hardpan. Very hard to detect, even with power setting.
- Yawing or hobby horsing.
- Stupidly short scope. Rare.
Unless the anchor is tragically undersized, it is not the reason you are dragging. My 2-pound Guardian will reliably hold 500 pounds (the wind load of a 38-foot boat in 30-35 knots) in good sand. A conventionally sized Rocna or Manson will hold well into huricane force.
But you can argue it to death, which I'm sure we will. How safe is safe? What are your anchoring bottoms like? How much care do you expend? How owten do you anchor? Do you anchor out in severe storms (winds over 50 knots, not just a lot of rain)? But rememmber, if you anchored on hardpan, an extra 15 pounds isn't going to make an important difference.