Neeves
Well-Known Member
Following on from my thread on 'hard seabeds' I wondered why people had bought a Fortress.
It has a number of attributes and some are: dismountable, light weight, ability to alter the fluke angle and optimise for mud or sand and it does have an amazingly high hold to weight ratio. It does have some weaknesses, anchors ARE a compromise - there is no perfect anchor - but if you bought one I assume you did the research and know its weaknesses - so no need to reiterate
I just wondered why people bought.
And leading on from this - how many bought because of the variable fluke angle and how many actually make the alteration?
We are acknowledged believers in alloy, or light weight. Our three, now 4, anchors are demountable - but we carry them all assembled. We do (or did) alter the fluke angle of the Fortress, for thin mud. We have recently bought an FX 16 and intend carrying it, assembled for 30 degrees, and also carry the older FX23 assembled for 45 degrees (I cannot be bothered with the faffing around to alter the angles). We do anchor in mud - of varying consistency. We often anchor in a fork or V and would now use the FX 16 in sand as one of the 2 anchors but use 'another' anchor for weed, stones etc
Jonathan
It has a number of attributes and some are: dismountable, light weight, ability to alter the fluke angle and optimise for mud or sand and it does have an amazingly high hold to weight ratio. It does have some weaknesses, anchors ARE a compromise - there is no perfect anchor - but if you bought one I assume you did the research and know its weaknesses - so no need to reiterate
I just wondered why people bought.
And leading on from this - how many bought because of the variable fluke angle and how many actually make the alteration?
We are acknowledged believers in alloy, or light weight. Our three, now 4, anchors are demountable - but we carry them all assembled. We do (or did) alter the fluke angle of the Fortress, for thin mud. We have recently bought an FX 16 and intend carrying it, assembled for 30 degrees, and also carry the older FX23 assembled for 45 degrees (I cannot be bothered with the faffing around to alter the angles). We do anchor in mud - of varying consistency. We often anchor in a fork or V and would now use the FX 16 in sand as one of the 2 anchors but use 'another' anchor for weed, stones etc
Jonathan