BabaYaga
Well-Known Member
I posted about my plans for such a project in another forumite's thread last summer.
Home-made chain stopper
This spring I finally got around to having it made and now I have been using it for half a season. And so far it has been working really well and I find it being a useful addition to the bow roller (I retrieve by hand, no windlass, a mixed rode made up of 8mm chain and 14mm multi plait nylon).
A chain stopper is more commonly a separate item, installed some distance aft of the bow roller. Which means it does not usually come into contact with the anchor shank. For a chain stopper integrated into the roller, the design will have to be different in order to allow the shank to pass. In other words the hinge of the pawl must be tall enough.
In this design the pawl can be flipped up 180 degrees so that it doesn't bear on the rode when hauling the rope section.
Home-made chain stopper
This spring I finally got around to having it made and now I have been using it for half a season. And so far it has been working really well and I find it being a useful addition to the bow roller (I retrieve by hand, no windlass, a mixed rode made up of 8mm chain and 14mm multi plait nylon).
A chain stopper is more commonly a separate item, installed some distance aft of the bow roller. Which means it does not usually come into contact with the anchor shank. For a chain stopper integrated into the roller, the design will have to be different in order to allow the shank to pass. In other words the hinge of the pawl must be tall enough.
In this design the pawl can be flipped up 180 degrees so that it doesn't bear on the rode when hauling the rope section.
