RichardS
N/A
There is no load on the windlass if you are using the clutch. It simply locks the chain to the locked gipsy. Look at the spec of a Lofrans Falkon. You can do this with a slightly slack or tight chain. The locked gipsy doesnt have any consequences for the gearbox in the windlass.
I can't imagine how a clutch-locked gypsy cannot exert a force on the gearbox which it was not designed for. It is inevitable that if enough force is applied to the chain then something will give and all we are considering is what will give first.
In the case of our windlass, what gives first is that that chain starts to run out around the locked gypsy. Presumably, if the chain had a longer run than 90 degrees around the gypsy and gripped better, then the next thing to fail would be the pinion in the gearbox. With a chain lock bolted down through the deck with a backing plate , the chain between the lock and the windlass remains slack at all times and there is zero stress on the windlass when anchored.
If the chain lock fails then we are in big trouble because the deck is breaking apart and the state of the windlass would be the least of our worries.
Richard