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-   -   How long (Chain on Anchor) (https://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/general-q/51878-how-long-chain-anchor.html)

MAKDADDY 06-08-2003 04:24 PM

How long (Chain on Anchor)
 
well on a 30 foot boat mainly used in shallow lakes and on the river, How much chain should you lead the anchor with?
i always thought 3 foot. is 8 foot too long?

dhlaw 06-08-2003 04:27 PM

The longer the chain the better the chance of getting and maintaining a good hold of the bottom. 8 feet is probably OK, I use about that much when I fish offshore in 100 to 300 feet of water. Chances are you wount have to be worried about riding out a storm on the hook in deep water though.

HyperBaja 06-08-2003 05:06 PM

Would any benefits come from a few feet on a 19' in 35' or less water, less than 2'??

cuda 06-08-2003 05:26 PM

More is better, but remember, eight feet of anchor chain is pretty tough to pull without dragging it on something. On my fish boat I have eight feet, but on my Formula, it is closer to three or four.

MAKDADDY 06-08-2003 05:49 PM

Cuad
i agree the boat i just bought has about that much chain(8 foot)
It was a real pain in the ass to pull out of the locker. I am real close to cutting it down to about 3 foot.

Greg

cuda 06-08-2003 05:54 PM

Cut it off, if you find it doesn't work, you can link it back on.

Payton 06-08-2003 06:48 PM

Last years West Marine catlog had a chart about chain and rope length. The chart isn't in this years catalog. But, the anchor/rode packages they sell list:
up to 24'- 15' 1/4" chain and 150' 3/8 rope
up to 31'- 15' 1/4" chain and 250' 7/16 rope
up to 35'- 20' 1/4' chain and 250' 1/2" rope

I've got 16' feet of 1/4" chain and have never had an anchor drag. Even when others around me were having trouble. That was anchoring in 4' waves on Lake Michigan.

MAKDADDY 06-08-2003 06:54 PM


Originally posted by Payton
Last years West Marine catlog had a chart about chain and rope length. The chart isn't in this years catalog. But, the anchor/rode packages they sell list:
up to 24'- 15' 1/4" chain and 150' 3/8 rope
up to 31'- 15' 1/4" chain and 250' 7/16 rope
up to 35'- 20' 1/4' chain and 250' 1/2" rope

I've got 16' feet of 1/4" chain and have never had an anchor drag. Even when others around me were having trouble. That was anchoring in 4' waves on Lake Michigan.

payton
thanks I think the chain on this anchor is larger then 1/4. that might be the problem. i will check into the different sizes, it may be that simple. this chain is like a log chain.
Do you have trouble pulling up that much chain? how do you keep from beating the heck out of the boat?:(

Greg

florida gator 06-08-2003 07:13 PM

Depends what you are doing, but, shallow water lakes don't have much current. I agree with dhlaw in the sense that when you have current the more the better. But ,in shallow lakes with no current, the less you can get away with the better.

As far as keeping it from beating u the boat, you can buy pre-cut chain from West Marine coated in an epoxy that is much more forgiving on your fiberglass than the metal.

cuda 06-08-2003 07:21 PM

Be careful with those rubber covered chains. I had one that rusted in two, but I couldn't see it.

mcollinstn 06-08-2003 10:22 PM

I drop the hook in areas that are mostly 15' deep. Mud bottom for the most part.

I don't use any chain. Don't need it. Throw out 75' of line on the anchor, pull on it to set it. If it's windy, I leave all the line out, if it's dead calm, I'll pull half of it back in so I don't swing as big of an arc.

I do this with my Whaler, my Formula, and my cruiser (well, I probably put out more line on the cruiser cause I just push a button to drop it then back up and push the button again to make it grab - its easier to throw out a bunch of line when you never have to touch it).

I set anchor and tie off my stern to a chain on the shore around a big old tree with 50 feet of three strand 5/8" nylon. I pull until my windlass stalls (around 3500 pounds per the manual). I regularly have up to TEN boats rafted off my starboard side (the kids play to PORT so nobody gets to tie up there except jetskis and stuff). Some of the rafters will throw out a cheap crap anchor and 3 extra feet more line than the water depth, so basically my anchor is the only one set. We've been like that thru some stiff wind. No chain.


Rough water with rolling waves demand a heavy length of chain. I don't have anything like that on my lake.

So, here I am telling you that in water with mud bottom and no rollers you need ZERO chain.

Ocean water with the up and down elevation changes, you DO need something heavy to lay down and take the slack when the boat goes up and down.

Determine your water conditions and adjust accordingly.


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