Is this stainless steel anchor chain suitable?

A boat anchored off the Chaguaramas in Trindad had stainless chain he was anchored for over a year with the chain rubbing over the sand, this caused crevice corrosion and it broke. I have never heard of galvanised chain breaking.

I can assure you galvanised chain from, apparently, reputable European manufacturers has broken (bad weld), I have the images. I can also assure you that galvanised chain from sources unknown to the owner of the yacht (so second or third hand etc) has broken. I have seen galvanised chain (and have the samples) from '1st World' supplier where the there has been no match/alignment of the 2 halves of the weld.

Don't be complacent.

Jonathan
 
A boat anchored off the Chaguaramas in Trindad had stainless chain he was anchored for over a year with the chain rubbing over the sand, this caused crevice corrosion and it broke. I have never heard of galvanised chain breaking.

A regular contributor to the magazine and this forum suffered a broken galvanised chain this year. I cannot understand how a stainless chain can fail by crevice corrosion. The mechanism cannot exist.
 
Hi Richard,

Originally I didn't think that the pipe would be in the way, as I thought 2 people could be in the v-berth and sleep with their feet either side, that proved not to be the case.

So I cut the 2 vertical pieces of pipe and sheeved them with 2 pieces of silicone pipe, when at anchor I can then remove the pipe/chain and hang out of the way. I don't have a picture of this to hand.

So far it seems to work quite well.

That's interesting Gary. It's not a solution to the chain pyramid that I've ever seen before.

Like you, I would have thought that people could sleep with their feet either side of the pipe but it seems not.

I now understand what you mean about moving the pipe out of the way of the feet but with the chain still inside it. Very good thinking. :)

Richard
 
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