estarzinger
Well-Known Member
Somewhat related to the thread about anchor swivels . . .
I just tested a range of thimble designs. The loads quoted are all when a wall of the thimble started to distort sideways. They have already collapsed and elongated to some degree by this point.
There were two surprises. First is how poor the conventional open galvanized thimble (as used on many anchor rodes) is. Both the 5/16" and 1/2" sizes distorted at only 57% of the tensile of the appropriate size nylon 3 strand line. Second is how relatively good the closed nylon thimbles were (compared to the galvanized). They distorted at slightly higher load, and bounced back to near their original shape when the load was taken off. The open stainless thimble distorted at essentially 100% of the line tensile, so is "good enough". The clear winner is the closed stainless thimble (aka a sailmakers thimble). It was the only one which exceeded the nylon tensile strength - giving a safety margin for nylon and allowing for use with higher strength lines.
The picture below is of the thimbles after the test.
View attachment 40664
I just tested a range of thimble designs. The loads quoted are all when a wall of the thimble started to distort sideways. They have already collapsed and elongated to some degree by this point.
There were two surprises. First is how poor the conventional open galvanized thimble (as used on many anchor rodes) is. Both the 5/16" and 1/2" sizes distorted at only 57% of the tensile of the appropriate size nylon 3 strand line. Second is how relatively good the closed nylon thimbles were (compared to the galvanized). They distorted at slightly higher load, and bounced back to near their original shape when the load was taken off. The open stainless thimble distorted at essentially 100% of the line tensile, so is "good enough". The clear winner is the closed stainless thimble (aka a sailmakers thimble). It was the only one which exceeded the nylon tensile strength - giving a safety margin for nylon and allowing for use with higher strength lines.
The picture below is of the thimbles after the test.
View attachment 40664