Magnum
RIP
Would a snubber attached directly to the stemhead fitting have enough shock absorption?
Yes I think it would, but there's no fixing point there strong enough to take the load.
Would a snubber attached directly to the stemhead fitting have enough shock absorption?
you use the winch for those jobsYou would need a chain stopper to hold the chain while it was setup and also de rigged
The " crew" need a way of de tensioning it - to make it easy esp retrieval in a dark , wind , wet bug out.
The capstan itself, with a loop of rope around it.Yes I think it would, but there's no fixing point there strong enough to take the load.
Mk II
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The capstan itself, with a loop of rope around it.
Yes I think it would, but there's no fixing point there strong enough to take the load.
The capstan itself, with a loop of rope around it.
Positively +1. :encouragement:Yep MK2 should work - perhaps with some of those D section stainless strips as well.
I don't see that as an issue, because there's an inverse relationship between the angle of the snubber lines and their load.They work great for med bow lines as the angle is quite shallow. My concern with using them for a dual snubber is that the angle of lines from the rubbing strakes down to the anchor chain is much sharper, which means rubbing on the rubber section of hull rubbing strake.
We are using the Ultra chain grabber - https://www.ultramarine-anchors.com/chain-grab
"The Ultra Marine Chain Grab protects the windlass from constant chain pull, and is easily attachable to a loaded anchor chain, disengaging automatically from the chain upon retrieval."
So maybe a little bit of a faff to deploy, but disengaging (the important bit) doesn't sound like a problem.
The capstan itself, with a loop of rope around it.
Isn't that defeating the whole point of taking load off the windlass? Having said that with stretchy nylon, there will be less shock involved.
I don't think it is the taking the load of the windlass per se.
I thought it is more that the windlass usually has a clutch which can slip when the chain is tugged.
The V4 and V5 windlasses certainly have a cone clutch - though, I think the V8 has a dog clutch which might be less likely to slip.
Do you know which one you have?
I suspect it will be a V6.
Mine is a V4 which I have upgraded to a V5
Confused. We have a V6.
The capstan itself, with a loop of rope around it.
No way. The loop around the capstan would just slide on the capstan. It would definitely work well. To deploy, place loop around capstan and pay out chain till chain is just slack. To retrieve, wind in chain (capstan won't pull rope; rope loop will just slide) and almost immediately the rope loop goes loose and can be removed. Definitely works.Problem with that is that the windlass is used to let the chain out so that the strop/bridle can take the load.
Likewise, on retrieval, you need to use the windlass to recover the strop/bridle.
Well - thats what we would do anyway.
With a loop over the capstan, there is a risk of tangling the strop - or worse, it starts to wind round the capstan.
Because a capstan *is*a strong point and this method places no load on the winch gears. The capstan shaft bearings can easily take the side load in their stride- you don't jack up you car when you park it. No complexity of Y ropes etc.Thanks H, but no. Confused why jfm would suggest using a loop of rope around the capstan as an alternative to a strong point on the stem head.
Because a capstan *is*a strong point and this method places no load on the winch gears. The capstan shaft bearings can easily take the side load in their stride- you don't jack up you car when you park it. No complexity of Y ropes etc.
Agreed, but I still would rather route the snubber line(s) through the fairleads rather than inside the bow roller cheecks.The capstan shaft bearings can easily take the side load in their stride