Homer J
Well-Known Member
I’ve anchored many times in Newtown creek with a ‘fake’ 16kg Delta on a 37ft Jeanneau. Sets and holds like a dream. Last time (two weeks ago) didn’t move an inch in 30 kts. Plenty of others there with deltas too.
Just be aware I have seen boats come ashore at Prinsted having blown down the Thorney channel even though it does dry out and it was attached to mooring blockI have a 28 foot 6 tonner and anchor a lot in Chi harbour. I have a 25lb CQR and, apart from one incident where I tried to anchor on hard shingle, have not dragged it. For a peaceful night, I would recommend anchoring a bit further up Thorney creek.
Our delta doesnt drag! thick mud especially. the boss goes to the bow, I shout drop, put her in tickover reverse and she pays the chain out. 5 times depth, the chain statts to lift and tighten with her foot on it. We come to a stop, the chain lifts and goes tight, I then give it 1500 revs and it is set! Thats it! Culatra in Portugal, notorious for dragging boats and 20-25 kts in the afternoon, not an issue. I watched a mate with a new fangled one, miles oversize, (why do they buy oversized ones? ) in Culatra and Portimao try and try and try! We sat their smug!I mainly anchor at Pilsey Island also at the bottom of Itchenor reach, East head very occasionally and New Town Creek. Would a Delta anchor be ok for this, I have never had one before. A Rocna sounds great but is three times the price. I have used claw anchors and Danforths before with OK results but they don,t dig in much, possibly as I have small boats, the weight of chain probably holds them mostly!
I only have a small IF Boat 26' 2.5 tonnes but was thinking of going with a 10KG Delta, 30m of 8mm chain and maybe 20m of rode. I would love to be able to anchor off one day in Studland Bay without having to be drugged up on Stugeron so perhaps more chain would be better. What do you think. Thanks...
The boat came from Torpoint with a 5KG claw anchor plus 10m of 8mm chain and 15m of rope, maybe for anchoring at Cawsands!
I’m intrigued by “noticeably better performance” - what does that mean?I note several users of Deltas remain positive about theirs, and it would probably do the job for you well enough - most of the time. However, even more individuals suggest that the French 'Kobra 2' gives noticeably better performance. This is also a 'modestly-priced' item and I'd encourage you to consider it actively.
This thread has some helpful comments - Kobra 2 anchor any good?
I'd also recommend doubling the available warp in your 'mixed rode' set up - I'm quite certain you'll want to use that a few times.
I mainly anchor at Pilsey Island also at the bottom of Itchenor reach, East head very occasionally and New Town Creek. Would a Delta anchor be ok for this, I have never had one before. A Rocna sounds great but is three times the price. I have used claw anchors and Danforths before with OK results but they don,t dig in much, possibly as I have small boats, the weight of chain probably holds them mostly!
I only have a small IF Boat 26' 2.5 tonnes but was thinking of going with a 10KG Delta, 30m of 8mm chain and maybe 20m of rode. I would love to be able to anchor off one day in Studland Bay without having to be drugged up on Stugeron so perhaps more chain would be better. What do you think. Thanks...
The boat came from Torpoint with a 5KG claw anchor plus 10m of 8mm chain and 15m of rope, maybe for anchoring at Cawsands!
Any anchor can fail if it picks up something on the seabed, fouls its chain etc.A few years ago I bent the shank on my danforth on holiday and the largest anchor I could find at the time was a 10kg delta. According to the specs it was a correct size for my 9m cat. It looked to small so replaced it with a 16kg rocna after the holday which was recommended by the rocna website, so the delta became a kedge. Last year the electric windlass packed up on holiday so I reverted to the delta as easier to lift, etc. Anchored in the Helford up by Frenchman's creek in lovely mud during an easterly gale the delta gave up holding and we started to drift up at nearly 2 knots. The delta had 5m of 8mm chain and 14mm polyester warp. I had a ratio of around 6 to 1 out at the time. Managed to retrieve the delta and put the ronca out. As soon as it touched the bottom it started to hold but gave it around 4 to 1 ratio. Until then I had been impressed by the delta but this was mainly in sand, etc.
Whether a Heavier delta would have been better I don't know, but I have been impressed by how the rocna just stops my boat dead when anchoring.
Any anchor can fail if it picks up something on the seabed, fouls its chain etc.
Unless you can dive on it and see what's going on, an isolated failure doesn't always tell you much.
It came up covered in mud only. We must have dragged 200 yards before we realised what was happening, thinking why are those other boats coming towards us ! I'm glad that I anchored with plenty of room between us.Any anchor can fail if it picks up something on the seabed, fouls its chain etc.
Unless you can dive on it and see what's going on, an isolated failure doesn't always tell you much.
I would be fine with 3 or 4 metres of chain. The only value of chain is avoiding chafe.Many thanks for your feedback folks, makes decisions easier and more informed.
ANCHOR...Having looked today at the shortlist of choices at Force 4 cnandlers I have decided to go for a Rocna. They only had the 10KG version which is pretty big surely for my light 2500KG 26' IF Boat. Understanding Rocnas size chart is tricky for such a light Boat a 8m. The kids at Force4 (mama get not present could not help). I am hoping a 6KG version would suffice but am ok
With 10KG which is what I am used to hauling up by hand.
RODE... having seen 30m of 8mm chain in the shop weighing 45KG it is clear that is not possible for my little boat and surely not necessary. Looking at comments, 6mm is quite adequate I hope, says 2500kg breaking strain on the Jimmey Green site! The bloody South Pacific windlass has an 8mm gypsey however. I would much prefer to just haul the lot into a chain locker by hand which is what I am used to and keep things simple. Shame I don,t have a chain locker with an open flap just a hole for the windlass to feed the chain and rope down. It does feed down rope as well aparantly. Need to think on that one but in the meantime...
How little chain, rope can I get away with for Chi Harbour and maybe Studland. I wonder if I can get away with 20 meters of chain and then rope making it up to perhaps 50 meters in total!? Especially if I stuck with 8mm chain...