Brian@Fortress
Well-Known Member
I have a cat - 40 ft, 5 tonnes. I have anchored all round the Atlantic circuit and learned a few lessons. My complement is a 16 kg Delta for Bower, an FX-16 as a kedge and an FX-37 for when nothing else can save me.
Over a year's cruising there were two occasions when I dragged with the Delta. One was in heavy kelp in the Spanish rias where the only remedy was to re-anchor and probably nothing but a massive Fisherman would have held. The other occasion was in a hurricane hole in Antigua where the bottom was pretty much liquid mud. The Delta did nothing but the FX-16 (on the soft mud setting) headed towards the centre of the earth. The problem was that after 3 days it wouldn't come back up as it had dug in so deep. In the end it came up after 1/2 hour heaving short and motoring around. I am certain that if I had used the big fortress I'd have had to abandon it.
Snowleopard, it appears that you encountered a similar bottom type to where the Chesapeake Bay test was conducted, as per the images below:
Here's the 21 lb (10 kg) FX-37 once we got it back aboard after one pull test:
And after we hosed off the soft mud:
We ended up losing this anchor during one attempt to retrieve it when we were directly above the anchor and pulling hard at a 1:1 scope. The winch operator had calculated that the anchor was buried 13 feet (4m) into the mud, and the 5/16" wire rope broke at 3,500 lbs (1,588 kg).
After a total of 60 pull tests with the FX-37, Danforth 35 HT, and the 44-46 lb (20-21 kg) new & old generation steel anchors, we decided to deploy the 10 lb (4.5 kg) FX-16 that we had brought aboard at the 45° angle for soft mud, and it was definitely one of the most difficult anchors to retrieve during the entire testing:
Here's a video from one of the FX-16 pull tests, at about 8:00 minutes:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Ga1_LCZ90g&spfreload=10