I have been using the rope to chain back splice (eyeless eye splice) since the late 70's when I acquired a "Sea Horse" windlass by S & L--one of the first production electric combination rope chain gypsies. I have used this splice for over 100,000 miles of cruising without failure, but when full time cruising, I do renew the splice when I end for end the chain each year. There never has been appreciable wear at the link 180 degree bend. U S sailing tested this splice very scientifically in June of 1994:
http://www.ussailing.org/safety/Studies ... splice.htm They found that it tested within 25 % of the breaking load of the rope--and often beyond the SWL of the chain.
Their studies showed that there was 25% loss of the strength of the line-which is about par for most splices, and no significant wear at the chain interface. Thus far I have not had a problem (and used this on 5 boats/windlasses)--with the splice. However I do taper the last three tucks of the splice, to give a more gradual transition--by 1/3 of the bundle on each of the last three tucks. I also fuse the ends flush with a soldering iron/rope cutting blade, or lighter and wet fingers (depending on size of the rope). I have also tried putting a short piece of heat shrink tubing in the splice throat.
I have personally been leary of the weaving the rope thru the chain, although there are some who swear by it. Many recommend relaying the rope to 4 strands, and interweavingthem. It depends on direct friction of the rope with the chain. The back splice is a slightly different principle. It is more like the chinese finger puzzel; the harder you pull, the tighter the lay becomes and grips the spliced strands. I don't believe that this is true for the woven chain splice. I am also a bit hesitant to rely on a splice which depends on sewing for strength (but again this is an accepted technique for some applications: some of the mega braids and flat ropes are handled this way, with whipping tightly, and then over sewing).
I did a splice like Sea Wolf suggests tonight, and it seems solid. If I get a chance I will put a come along on it and see what it takes to pull it apart, without the over sewing (I have some reservations about threads breaking and chafing with the over sewing). The only over sewing I have depended on was with served ropes and braids, or in the throat of thimble splices, where the lay of the rope remains dense and properly twisted. As you thread the strands thru the chain, they tend to come unlaid in this weave thus not as dense, and more likely that sewing will pull thru.
The crown knot is the basis of an end splice or back splice and is not really a knot which weakens the rope any more than a splice. However I don't believe that the use of a crown know would improve this idea.
Various knots fail at different rates, and depend also on shock loading vs straight sustained pull. The better knots are loop knots such as the bowline or bowline on a bite, the fisherman's knot, the Carreck bend or even the clove hitch, anchor/fisherman's hitch and tug boat hitch (a modified timberline hitch) thes are knots I tend to use rather than weaker knots--they retain 60 to 70% of the rope strength--but a little below a good splice. I have only broken one splice and that was on a load which was probably about 8,000 lbs on a 1/2" line. This was a white squall which suddenly hit a 60,000 lb boat on its beam and healed it over more than 70 degrees, with only a small sail up. I have put enough force on lines to have fused the strands with heat, and not broken them or their splices. (long story on that one)
Thank you for bringing this interesting chain to rope attatchment to our attention! I am going to stick to my tapered back splice over the link of chain for now, since I have long and satisfactory experience with it.
Regards,