Babylon
Well-Known Member
I have 30m of chain (8mm) plus 50m of rode (16mm if I recall correctly), a total cable of 80m. Will this be sufficient scope for a month's cruise on the N Brittany coast?
I have 30m of chain (8mm) plus 50m of rode (16mm if I recall correctly), a total cable of 80m. Will this be sufficient scope for a month's cruise on the N Brittany coast?
I have 30m of chain (8mm) plus 50m of rode (16mm if I recall correctly), a total cable of 80m. Will this be sufficient scope for a month's cruise on the N Brittany coast?
I have 30m of chain (8mm) plus 50m of rode (16mm if I recall correctly), a total cable of 80m. Will this be sufficient scope for a month's cruise on the N Brittany coast?
In the worst places you have maybe 11-12m of tide at springs, add 3m of minimum depth that is around 15m total depth at HW
Your scope will be around 5 which would be ok in most cases, supposing springs and that you anchor in a charted depth of say 3m.
It might be a problem at slack low water, 80m in 3m is more than 25 scopeand the boat risk to go all over the place trying to make company with other boats.
FWIW my boat had 80m and cruised North Brittany without too many problems
Give us a hint.
Mirror dinghy?
50 foot Bavaria?
Maltese Falcon?
HMS Ark Royal?
How deep are you planning to anchor in?I have 30m of chain (8mm) plus 50m of rode (16mm if I recall correctly), a total cable of 80m. Will this be sufficient scope for a month's cruise on the N Brittany coast?
HMS Vancouver 27heavy old bird. 25lb CQR - only ever dragged once, and that was on rocks!
With an 8m boat you have quite a tough rode, which will give 0° of angulation with:
Depth Wind
20m 25Kn
15m 20Kn
10m 35Kn
5m 50Kn
Mind you, 50Kn will give about 500kgf of horizontal force (and similar tension)which, if nothing else, will be hard to pull back in.
With a CQR you should ensure that there's no angulation.
Do you not have a table that gives rode length for depth/wind strength for your anchoring equipment?
I have no table.
By 'angulation' I assume you mean horizontal angle as the boat veers around? How can one ensure 'no angulation' whatever anchor one is using?
Why do CQR anchors differ to others?
[Dons a Noddy suit and disappears into a deep underground chamber...]
From memory, I think St Malo has a tidal range of up to 12 metres. Five times that plus allowance for the distance from water line to the chain locker comes to 65 metres, which is the amount of chain that I carry. So your 80 metres should ensure you have peace of mind.
From memory, I think St Malo has a tidal range of up to 12 metres. Five times that plus allowance for the distance from water line to the chain locker comes to 65 metres, which is the amount of chain that I carry.
With an 8m boat you have quite a tough rode, which will give 0° of angulation with:
Depth Wind
20m 25Kn
15m 20Kn
10m 35Kn
5m 50Kn
Having swum to my anchor many times in fresh to strong winds I disagree with these figures. In Cala Volpe on the east side of Sardinia we anchored for several days in about 2 metres total depth with 35 metres of chain out. Wind speed varied during the period from around 25 to 42 knots. On very many occasions the chain was bar tight, no catenary whatsoever and none of it touching the bottom. In Galixidhi in the Gulf of Corinth we anchored in slightly more water, about 2.5 metres, with around 30 metres of chain, with similar observations. With a mixed rode I would expect this to occur at lower wind speeds. Delta on the first occasion, Rocna the second. All chain, total carried 60 metres.
Having swum to my anchor many times in fresh to strong winds I disagree with these figures. In Cala Volpe on the east side of Sardinia we anchored for several days in about 2 metres total depth with 35 metres of chain out. Wind speed varied during the period from around 25 to 42 knots. On very many occasions the chain was bar tight, no catenary whatsoever and none of it touching the bottom. In Galixidhi in the Gulf of Corinth we anchored in slightly more water, about 2.5 metres, with around 30 metres of chain, with similar observations. With a mixed rode I would expect this to occur at lower wind speeds. Delta on the first occasion, Rocna the second. All chain, total carried 60 metres.
Quite happy to justify the figures with details of the various forces involved - vertical, tensional and horizontal. They're based on a standard shaped 8m monohull, 30m of 8mm chain and 50m of warp, with up to 30° of yaw, and do not include snatching forces.
Perhaps yours is a larger boat, or different chain? If you tell me the size of your boat and anchoring gear I'm happy to give you equivalent figures to see if they match your experience.
'no catenary whatsoever' is an interesting comment. Perhaps your chain was 'bar tight', but it would have been in a curve unless the chain was made of a very light metal
A mixed rode, with 30m of chain as here, may make less difference than you think.
My boat is 10.6 metres length, 8 mm chain.
You are by no means the first to post theoretical information here, and many of us are familiar with the work of Alain Fraysse, and his website. 'No catenary' is my observation, I can believe that there was a small curve but sighting along it both from the anchor and the bow roller provided little evidence of it. Craig Smith showed photographs of his father's boat anchored in very strong winds in Patagonia, with 100 metres of apparently straight chain. Most people who have researched the topic agree that the contribution of catenary is effectively negligible at more than around Force 6 - 7.