Zing
Well-Known Member
Oops, quite right. I'm jumping to the obvious conclusion, but my assumption as you say is not based on fact.Magnum never actually said that the extortionate quote was from Princess - but maybe I missed a nuance or 3.
Oops, quite right. I'm jumping to the obvious conclusion, but my assumption as you say is not based on fact.Magnum never actually said that the extortionate quote was from Princess - but maybe I missed a nuance or 3.
But your picture shows it unfitted. Have they gone and fitted it before you had the chance to agree the mod with them? That would have been foolish. Then again, if it is unfitted, such an explanation for the price would be deeply troubling. Also, the stem does not look to be attached to the chain channel, so to remove the stem doesn't make sense either as it shouldn't be necessary to do so.Correct. At this stage I think it's best if the quotes stay anonymous.
I do have more information regarding the £1260 though. The stem head will be removed, drilled in a machine shop and refitted. 24 hours of labour costed for.
But in practice, this makes the whole channel concurrent in withstanding the chain longitudinal load, doesn't it?My understanding is, was, that the stopper is not attached (as such) to the channel - the bolts simply pass straight through and through the deck to the inside of the chain/anchor locker. The load is on the bolts, not the channel
Just tell them to deliver the boat without fitting the stem head. And ask a discount for that, in the process!The factory would not allow the chain stopper to be fitted to the stem head, prior to it being fitted.
But in practice, this makes the whole channel concurrent in withstanding the chain longitudinal load, doesn't it?
Ok, I guess you could argue that the stopper bolts shouldn't work in shear stress, and I would agree in principle, but I can't imagine a scenario where the chain pull could be enough to break them through shear stress...!
Mind, I'm not saying that a backing plate is pointless - simply that the stopper alone doesn't make it so much more compelling, if it isn't already there.
The factory would not allow the chain stopper to be fitted to the stem head, prior to it being fitted.
I get that, but it wasn't my main point.@mapism, in general there should be no shear loads at all on the bolts.
The correct assembly is to have the bolts in tension only, and the shear forces are then taken entirely by the friction created thereby.
You know what, I sort of agree.if it was me I would drop it -and -try the simple chain hook + cleat idea.
@hurricane, I struggling to digest that they're M16. Surely they're M10 or 12
I get that, but it wasn't my main point.
Don't you agree that as long as the stopper is bolted above the roller channel, they become concurrent in resisting any load? Yep
And if the whole bow roller assembly as it is (with or without the backing plate - I still didn't understand how the OEM setup is like - the set screws that hold the chain channel have backing plates 100x120 approx - an earlier magnum pic shows this) can withstand the heavy lateral snatch loads that can occur when the boat swings badly, don't you think that "a fortiori" it must withstand the longitudinal chain pull? I don't think that follows -a fortiori or otherwise- because the ss channel sits in a grp moulded channel at the bow, and the sides of that grp channel support the ss channel laterally
Again, I'm not saying that the backing plate is a bad idea - far from it.
Just wondering if and why the stopper per se can make it more necessary. I don't think it does in this case because the screws for the ss channel already have good enough backing plates, in a magnum picture several pages up.
In another thread, maybe? I can't find it in this one...set screws that hold the chain channel have backing plates 100x120 approx - an earlier magnum pic shows this
I would have thought that the grp mould was sized to allow the ss channel to sit "comfortably" inside it, hence relying on the bolts for strength.the sides of that grp channel support the ss channel laterally
You bet.I would have thought there was still chance for the chain to rattle on the bow roller and cause annoyance
Hence my conclusion in the last line of post #311, when all is said and done...
Yup a stopper and a snubber are 2 different things. As you know we only use the stopper to protect the winch when going astern to set the anchor. We find that the Rocna can set very hard very quickly and 40t of boat going astern at that point can put a large shock load on the winch if there is no stopper. But in order to stop the chain grinding on the bow roller and in our case putting large lateral loads on the bow roller assembly, we use a snubber although in quiet weather we wouldn't use itThe stopper makes zero difference in terms of grinding against the bow roller sides, as I already said in previous posts.
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