Unclematt
Senior Member
I was reading the thread about Ronca vs Mantus M1 and decided to order a Rocna Vulcan then I was reading about a CQR and its holding power. If given the choice what would you guys go with? Thanks for all of your wisdom.
Sorry about the duplicate I am new to this stuff and kind of get lost
Also realize that my CQR is 60 pounds for 48 foot of boat (comparable to 50+ ft today). It’s a respectable fit. It replaced the 35 pound CQR that came with the boat that was not, but smaller anchors was pretty common back in the day. The current recommended size for a Rocna at the upper end of the range is 120 pounds. Now I ask you, do you think the “modern” anchors are really THAT much better in design or is it just maybe possible that a larger reason that all the new anchors work so much better has something to do with the fact that they are routinely recommending anchors that are massively bigger, even twice as big than the “poor” designs they are marketing to replace? Just maybe?
Like I said, I’d like to replace my worn out CQR that gives me essentially no trouble. I just don’t believe in blind magic.
When I see boats with 2 anchors, the CQR is usually not deployed
For years I used a CQR on my 40’ sailboat. It held really well. It did NOT set well. When I bought my 43’ trawler, it came with a CQR copy. It held well, but was finicky to set. I replaced it with a Sarca Excel. It holds really well, but sets easily.
I still have that CQR sitting in my yard. Free for anyone who wants to take it.
This is settled science. With few exceptions, every credible anchor test I've seen for several years reveal the new-style 'scoop' anchors are superior to older styles. The exceptions are Danforth-style that still do well in mud and sand; and some sort of hook-anchor for rocky bottoms.
Surprised no one has mentioned the CQR style has a long shank that does not always fit well between the bow roller and the windlass on many boats.
Peter
I guess the issue is the same as with all technologies. Just because the next one along is "better" do you throw out thousands of dollars worth of equipment to upgrade. Then when the next generation comes along where the "science" proves it better do you cycle again?