A
Alcyone
Guest
I asked some questions on this forum towards the end of last year about mooring design, and got a lot of good advice. I thought it might be worth 'putting something back' and saying what I ended up doing.
I make no guarantees that this is the best way, or even the correct way, it's just what I did for my boat, with my constraints.
I have a 28ft Cobra sailing boat, weight approx 3.5 tonnes, and the mooring was to be at Dale, Milford Haven, a relatively sheltered anchorage, in tidal waters. I was to do a friend's mooring at the same time.
My constraints were that we live approx 90 miles from the site, and not only had to transport all the components, but had to be able to float them out to the mooring position at high tide, having dropped them off at the bottom of a slip at low tide.
I was limited to 22m total chain length by the harbourmaster. With a 7m (ish) maximum range, I decided to go for 12m ground chain and 10m riser chain. This would give me the best mix of weight on the bottom whilst still allowing for waves etc.
I was fortunate enough to be given 10m of 12mm chain to use as my riser, but bought 12m of 32mm heavy chain for my ground chain from a scrap merchant. It cost £10 per metre and weighed (approx) 7cwt.
I made the concrete blocks at 4cwt. Used some 32mm chain, cut with a grinder and galvanised 1” pipe inserted through the chain inside the blocks as extra strength. I figured 2 men could probably move 4cwt.
I bought a pile of large (1” bar thickness) shackles to link the whole lot together.
Then, the hard work. Load all of the gear into the trailers, transport them to West Wales drop them off at low tide at Dale, then, using lifting bags (I am a diver), move all the components, 1 at a time to our mooring positions, sink them, chain them together and affix the riser chains and buoys.
This took approx 3 days for the two moorings, and cost approx £400 for components and diesel/petrol. It was hard!
We were quoted £6-800 each for a contractor to lay the moorings for us, single concrete block, 10cwt, 3m ground chain and riser. Effectively, we saved about £4-600 each.
Was it worth it? I think so, but I’m in no hurry to do it again!
Hope that may be of use to anyone considering similar.
I make no guarantees that this is the best way, or even the correct way, it's just what I did for my boat, with my constraints.
I have a 28ft Cobra sailing boat, weight approx 3.5 tonnes, and the mooring was to be at Dale, Milford Haven, a relatively sheltered anchorage, in tidal waters. I was to do a friend's mooring at the same time.
My constraints were that we live approx 90 miles from the site, and not only had to transport all the components, but had to be able to float them out to the mooring position at high tide, having dropped them off at the bottom of a slip at low tide.
I was limited to 22m total chain length by the harbourmaster. With a 7m (ish) maximum range, I decided to go for 12m ground chain and 10m riser chain. This would give me the best mix of weight on the bottom whilst still allowing for waves etc.
I was fortunate enough to be given 10m of 12mm chain to use as my riser, but bought 12m of 32mm heavy chain for my ground chain from a scrap merchant. It cost £10 per metre and weighed (approx) 7cwt.
I made the concrete blocks at 4cwt. Used some 32mm chain, cut with a grinder and galvanised 1” pipe inserted through the chain inside the blocks as extra strength. I figured 2 men could probably move 4cwt.
I bought a pile of large (1” bar thickness) shackles to link the whole lot together.
Then, the hard work. Load all of the gear into the trailers, transport them to West Wales drop them off at low tide at Dale, then, using lifting bags (I am a diver), move all the components, 1 at a time to our mooring positions, sink them, chain them together and affix the riser chains and buoys.
This took approx 3 days for the two moorings, and cost approx £400 for components and diesel/petrol. It was hard!
We were quoted £6-800 each for a contractor to lay the moorings for us, single concrete block, 10cwt, 3m ground chain and riser. Effectively, we saved about £4-600 each.
Was it worth it? I think so, but I’m in no hurry to do it again!
Hope that may be of use to anyone considering similar.