petem
Well-Known Member
That's an easy one - analogue, because the ip cameras are inherently laggy.
J, what weight of chain do we have on out boats? 8mm?
That's an easy one - analogue, because the ip cameras are inherently laggy.
J, what weight of chain do we have on out boats? 8mm?
8mm is OE on the T40; I've got 80m on mine.
That's a lot of chain. I have 20 fathoms plus 5 fathoms added when new as an optional extra (so c. 45 metres in total).
You've got over double the standard amount that was supplied with the boat. Does it impact your trim (potentially for the better)?
That's a lot of chain. I have 20 fathoms plus 5 fathoms added when new as an optional extra (so c. 45 metres in total).
You've got over double the standard amount that was supplied with the boat.
One night in Caletta should fix that - thats where we couldn't set our Delta alongside you.The plain vanilla Delta is a keeper, too..
One night in Caletta should fix that - thats where we couldn't set our Delta alongside you.
IMO you will soon change to a proper anchor.
The Delta never actually sets it just ploughs at different levels of "plough".
I'm with JTB on this, P - 45m just ain't enough for a decent peace of mind, and if that's what FL supplied as standard, they should be ashamed of it.
Mind, in 17 years with 2x100m chain, I can only think of a couple of cases where I went anywhere near using the whole length, and both were for very peculiar reasons.
In fact, imho the 120m of Deleted User and MedMilo, let alone the 150 of Hurricane, are a bit overkill.
But of course, weight aside, it's better to have more chain than necessary rather than the opposite...
Imho, 60m is the very least you should have, and I would have understood that as OEM installation.
But 80 as JTB mentioned is certainly better. 8mm is perfectly fine for your boats, anyway.
Fwiw, I found 75m on the DP when I bought her, and I'm NOT considering to make it longer. The plain vanilla Delta is a keeper, too.
My own approach (though I accept that someone might have a different view) is that if the conditions are bad to the point of making me worry that 70m of chain aren't enough, I'm going to stay on watch, 'cause it would be hard to sleep anyway.
LOL, I see your point. Maybe I'm spoilt by the ground tackle of the previous boat, whose anchors were actually more akin to bricks than to anything sophisticated, but at 50Kg each they were oversized in proportion to the boat.One night in Caletta should fix that - thats where we couldn't set our Delta alongside you.
IMO you will soon change to a proper anchor.
The Delta never actually sets it just ploughs at different levels of "plough".
Afaik, all anchor chains are. Whatever that means - never exactly understood!Incidentally, I note that Fairline say the chain is calibrated. Any idea how? I can't remember seeing this on either of my boats.
Mmm... I didn't know (or didn't remember) of your previous experience with a 60Kg Delta.I'll second that. I upgraded to a 60kg Delta on my F630 when I first got it 4yrs ago and I thought that would be heavy enough not to have to worry about dragging ever again but I was wrong. It dragged in 2 different anchorages in fine sand in the Costa Smerelda and like you, it also dragged overnight in Caletta once luckily not enough to put us in danger. As you say, there's a good reason these types of anchors are called plough anchors. As you know I changed the 60kg Delta for a 55kg Rocna and the Rocna has never dragged anywhere in 2 seasons. I have a lot of confidence in it
My 150m of chain isn't because we anchor in deep water.
In fact it is the opposite.
I like tieing back to the rocks like MYAG taught me.
A longer chain means you can find a nice patch for the anchor further out from the shore and wind back to tie off. on the rocks
We used to have 70m - that wasn't enough to use this technique.
Like this
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Afaik, all anchor chains are. Whatever that means - never exactly understood!
Yep, of course when I said that you should consider a longer chain I meant for general Med usage. For what you have in mind at the moment, 45m should be ok.
Yes you can, you just need one of these thingiesWould it be possible to add 20m of S/S chain to my existing chain?
Yup, agreed.+1
in the adriatic this is standard method for anchoring, and the long chain gives a bit more "play" when you drop your anker and reverse to shore
Anyway, imho in this type of anchorage what really makes a big difference is the possibility to deploy two anchors, at an angle anywhere between 30 and 45 deg.
With that and 100m of chain each, I can't imagine any coastal anchorage which could put the boat in trouble.
Now with the DP, I'm not expecting to miss the longer chain so much - if anything, in such extreme conditions, it's the second anchor which I might regret not having.
But, hey-ho...!
Absolutely.it would fit nicely on a C70s
Absolutely.
Btw, there's a resident C70s in CF, all wooden construction so obviously earlier than yours (though I don't know by how many years), which has that arrangement.
I can't understand why they abandoned such solution later on...

Sorry, not any good one (also because her blue hull somewhat hides the anchor), but below you can at least get an idea. Yup, side pockets, anyway.any pictures ?