I've looked through the posts and didn't find a discussion of what lengths of lines people are really deploying. The books say with a 7:1 scope you get almost 100% of the anchor's holding power. Obviously this assumes something about the bottom. If you hook onto something substantial (well-shaped rock, cable, sunken ship) you could use a lot less scope.... In sand or mud, the scope would be more important.
In crowded anchorages and protected water, we normally use something like 3:1 here in Southern California. Even less sometimes.
What do people find they can normally use? I'm thinking a Fortress FX-16 (big aluminum danforth) and 20' 1/4" chain and 300' 1/2" line with a windlass on the 22 cruiser I'm getting in a week or so. I have some other anchors lying around, up to a 35lb CQR, but I think I'll try the FX-16 first, because I have it handy and it only weighs 10 lbs.
If I anchor off Catalina Island, it's going to be in about 100' of water, so anything over 3:1 is going to be a LOT of line.
(Maybe I'll decide to actually try the 35lb CQR. That ought to hold.)
Anyway, what do you find is a reasonable length to actually deploy if you're not in a hurricane?......
Jeff
In crowded anchorages and protected water, we normally use something like 3:1 here in Southern California. Even less sometimes.
What do people find they can normally use? I'm thinking a Fortress FX-16 (big aluminum danforth) and 20' 1/4" chain and 300' 1/2" line with a windlass on the 22 cruiser I'm getting in a week or so. I have some other anchors lying around, up to a 35lb CQR, but I think I'll try the FX-16 first, because I have it handy and it only weighs 10 lbs.
If I anchor off Catalina Island, it's going to be in about 100' of water, so anything over 3:1 is going to be a LOT of line.
(Maybe I'll decide to actually try the 35lb CQR. That ought to hold.)
Anyway, what do you find is a reasonable length to actually deploy if you're not in a hurricane?......
Jeff