Neeves
Well-Known Member
A reason for the thread
When I first looked at high tensile gal chain the doom sayers all said - bah! HT chain its brittle, it will snap like a crisp (or chip if you have crunchy french fries). I then tested it to find 2 things
Americans demand that HT chain has a 20% elongation, but G3, G4 and G7 have only a 15% elongation to break. I also found some American anchor chain does not meet American standards (and no-one says or find it to be brittle) and that gal HT chain have an actual elongation of over 20%. Basically the armchair critics had no idea. (Some HT chain is brittle - but not gal HT chain I tested). G70 had abetter elongation than some G3 and G4.
So I wondered if the idea of crevice corrosion and work hardening would rear their heads, how they applied to duplex stainless and then was it relevant.
The amount of stainless I see on bows, or in the rode, including the rode itself (and anchors) suggests its all a bit peripheral. Work hardening and crevice corrosion might be an issue - but not under the conditions most of us experience. I have not heard of an Ultra anchor failing, other than by bending (and that's an issue with many anchors). Not a single person on the shackle thread made mention their stainless shackle had failed. And if stainless chain was failing we would surely know - as everyone could then have said 'I told you so'!
So far here, 19 relies is not much, - there do not appear to be any issues, other than price.
Looking at Jimmy Greens prices, and the prices I quoted earlier then duplex chain is slightly more than twice the price for the same sized Maggi G70. If I've got that wrong correct me. I recall reading Noelex suggesting he was changing his G70 every 4 or 5 years. Duplex chain comes with matching connectors, all G60 - so no need to go and search for something that fits.
And then you get all the advantages of less towering, cleaner chain, more chain in the chain locker (the latter I had not thought of.
On chain wear - the first few metres, don't get much wear, they do not drag over the seabed as far as the next few metres and the last few metres are hanging and don't get worn. So its the middle part of the used rode that gets the wear. I assume Duplex is quite hard, so it should wear better than normal stainless.
Jonathan
When I first looked at high tensile gal chain the doom sayers all said - bah! HT chain its brittle, it will snap like a crisp (or chip if you have crunchy french fries). I then tested it to find 2 things
Americans demand that HT chain has a 20% elongation, but G3, G4 and G7 have only a 15% elongation to break. I also found some American anchor chain does not meet American standards (and no-one says or find it to be brittle) and that gal HT chain have an actual elongation of over 20%. Basically the armchair critics had no idea. (Some HT chain is brittle - but not gal HT chain I tested). G70 had abetter elongation than some G3 and G4.
So I wondered if the idea of crevice corrosion and work hardening would rear their heads, how they applied to duplex stainless and then was it relevant.
The amount of stainless I see on bows, or in the rode, including the rode itself (and anchors) suggests its all a bit peripheral. Work hardening and crevice corrosion might be an issue - but not under the conditions most of us experience. I have not heard of an Ultra anchor failing, other than by bending (and that's an issue with many anchors). Not a single person on the shackle thread made mention their stainless shackle had failed. And if stainless chain was failing we would surely know - as everyone could then have said 'I told you so'!
So far here, 19 relies is not much, - there do not appear to be any issues, other than price.
Looking at Jimmy Greens prices, and the prices I quoted earlier then duplex chain is slightly more than twice the price for the same sized Maggi G70. If I've got that wrong correct me. I recall reading Noelex suggesting he was changing his G70 every 4 or 5 years. Duplex chain comes with matching connectors, all G60 - so no need to go and search for something that fits.
And then you get all the advantages of less towering, cleaner chain, more chain in the chain locker (the latter I had not thought of.
On chain wear - the first few metres, don't get much wear, they do not drag over the seabed as far as the next few metres and the last few metres are hanging and don't get worn. So its the middle part of the used rode that gets the wear. I assume Duplex is quite hard, so it should wear better than normal stainless.
Jonathan
