Yeah, 99.99% of the time I would be fine with a danforth. But an anchor IS a critical safety item on a boat, and when relying on it, it’s just nice to have a little extra peace of mind, and that’s worth the extra money to me vs using the danforth that came with the boat.
I’m going to return the 25 lbs anchor, even if there is a restocking fee. I don’t really need an anchor that can hold up to 50 knots of wind for my use case.
I’ll order the 17 lbs M1 anchor directly from Mantus. They have a 20% off July 4 sale right now. It looks like the Mantus has a smaller shaft than the Manson Supreme and Rocna Original, so I’m hoping it will fit in my
bow roller sideways. They have dimensions on their website but not of the height of the shaft. It’s also cheaper than the Rocna, it has more surface area, and if I want to buy a bigger primary anchor later on, I can unbolt the Mantus and stow it as a backup anchor.
I’ll keep a 200 ft 1/2” nylon double raid all rope rode for regular day use (that will get me a 10:1 scope in my shallow lake), and if I do an overnight, I’ll add 10 ft of chain for chafe resistance (I haven’t found any rocks in the lake bed yet, but you know murphey’s law…).
One thing about holding power:
Adding a lot of extra nylon rope to your rode not only increases your holding power by increasing the scope, it also increasing the holding power by greatly reducing shock loads. If I went from 200 ft to 300 ft of nylon rode, it won’t massively affect the scope, but it would SIGNIFICANTLY reduce shock loads. There are two reasons for this. The first and obvious reason is that a greater length of nylon rope will be more elastic. It delays the onset of peak load and reduces dynamic loading. The second reason which is probably not obvious to most people, is that a 300 ft nylon rope has significant catenary weight. Rigidity of a beam decreases with the cube of the length. So in other words, with a very long rope rode, even though it doesn’t weigh very much, it will have a a lot of sag in it. Usually people talk about this catenary effect only because it affects the angle of load on the anchor. But it also decreases shock loading by delaying the onset of peak load. Even though nylon rope doesn’t have a lot of weight, if there is enough length of it, there will be a significant amount of sag in it, and that will help reduce dynamic loading.
Sorry if that’s hard to read. I wrote it out fast. Happy July 4th y’all!