mainsail1
Well-known member
I was surprised at the way he dismissed any anchor with a hoop without proper explanation as to why.
I'm a bit puzzled by this note - Optional roll bar for sailboat application. Why would a sailboat need a roll bar whereas the statement suggests power boats don't? The type of boat has no effect on an anchor's performance.
I was surprised at the way he dismissed any anchor with a hoop without proper explanation as to why.
The Ultra anchor is certainly a very good anchor, but amongst the many good results I have observed, there have been a couple of disappointing performances. Anyway, take a look at the many photos I have taken of the Ultra underwater and make up your own mind.
This is one of the occasions when I was disappointed with the performance I was observing. It was only at 3:1 (after allowing for the bow roller height as you should do) in only 4m water. This is a tough test.
The Ultra set nicely and rotated level in a reasonable distance, but a lot of the underside of the fluke is still exposed. The set is much more a piling up of the sand rather than a diving down of the fluke. Worryingly, it was still gradually moving backwards in the gusts rather than digging in further. You can see the puffs of sand that are given off as it shifts back. Notice how the chain is lifting during the gusts, as you would expect for this wind force and scope, but the chain angle is still reasonable:
I had a Rocna, now I have a spade. I hated the roll bar for what could get stuck in it or it could hook on to. However now I worry that the Spade is not as good as the Rocna... The truth is I haven't had a problem with the Spade, but when you have had a Rocna it is difficult to have that much confidence in other anchors.
I am however convinced that the Ultra is better than the Rocna but the sheer cost is holding me back.
One disadvantage with the lead tipped weighted anchors is that it seems for me anyway that the recommended weight of anchor is more than the previous gen of anchors. For my little 26' 2250KG boat Rocna themselves emailed me to say I need a 10KG anchor with a minimum of 7mm chain (even though it says 6mm on their chart) The Spade comes out even heavier at 10KG plus but the Kobra is 6-8KG on their chart as is the Delta!
I think a large factor is that by recommending small sizes the anchor model is more likely to be chosen by high volume boatbuilders (such as Beneteau etc) to be sold as standard equipment. It enables the boatbuilder to choose as small an anchor as possible without violating the anchor manufacturer’s recommendations. This has savings for the boatbuilder not just for the anchor itself, but more importantly for the anchor winch, bow roller and other associated equipment. These have to be sized to cope with the anchor weight. Lewmar recommends very small sizes for their Delta model and I think it no coincidence that this is the most popular anchor included with new boat purchases. To compete in this market other manufacturers are forced to follow suit.
Very true, always very well put together. What else would you expect from a former professional cameraman and mainstream tv journalist?What a very high quality video. Approaching pro production standards. Lovely to watch.
Great to see some loads for given wind strengths.
Would be very interesting to see a similar test with no wind but 1m waves or more.
I think you’d pressed the quote button. Do you want your text back?Deleted due to YBWs forum software doing weird things
check out the price of the 16kg on that site! ?It will be interesting to see how the new Lewmar Epsilon compares. The s/s version is coming out in November and the Galv one in Feb/March in the U.K.
Lewmar Epsilon Stainless Steel Anchor