With a windlass and Sampson post I never intend to have tension on the bitter end. But you raise a good point to be considered and avoided.Being able to release under load might be worth considering.
With a windlass and Sampson post I never intend to have tension on the bitter end. But you raise a good point to be considered and avoided.Being able to release under load might be worth considering.
I use a thin piece of Amsteel long enough to be cut easily from up top. That said I’m also moving up to 700ft of 1/2g43 up from 350ft so will find a creative spot to store bolt cutters if I do need to cut. I love the floating line idea, might consider that.
I find cutting amsteel is pretty easy with the rigging knives I use, but nylon works just as well.
I don’t actually anchor in places needing 700ft it’s more that my windlass only handles one very large chain locker, so I have two Rocna 55kg anchors on the bow, one connected one not, if I get an anchor stuck I’ll cut the chain, attach to a float and reconnect the remaining to the 2nd anchor.
I have a hard point in my anchor locker and when I bought the boat the PO had shackled the end of the chain to it.
Or attach it with 50 to 75 feet of bright floating line...
That way if you cut it and it gets away from you before you get a bouy on it, you may still see enough line to retrieve it later.
The last 15’ of chain is painted red so no need for indicators- I like the floating line idea since most water I navigate is fairly shallow. I think that the average depth of SF Bay is about 4’, and the Sacramento delta is about the same
As I posted, the only times I have heard of dropping the whole rig was ....
Either all the time in the world where snapping on lines or hitting MOBs is possible, or it is a panic where rational thought is a distant memory for most.
That's why I have light line connecting the chain so it can part on it's own if I want it to, rather than heavy line that ALWAYS needs to be cut.