That's crazy
A chute doesn't need the boat to be hove-to and a good hove-to boat doesn't need a chute. They are different methods to survive bad weather and I've never heard of them being combined into one method.Personally, I think the chute is a good thing for the very extreme cases. Lets say I'm in Houston and decide to sail to Cancun in late May. I get halfway and because of global warming, a pre-season tropical storm forms right in my path and is heading my way. Now lets say I was stupid enough to go on this trip without storm sails but had a chute and a drogue. If I use the chute early, I can weather the storm down below and it should pass in a day (hopefully). If I use the drogue, I have to turn around and run with the storm for maybe 2 or 3 days, giving up all that progress I had made earlier as well as having to deal with being out in the weather steering the boat.Personally, I think I would rather put up a storm sail and try feathering (a 30 degree angle). That should give me about 2-3 knots going forward taking the waves on the bow (the strongest part of the boat) and getting through the storm quicker and not putting a lot of pressure on the rigging. Bad part about that is one has to be at the helm. Can't let the boat fall off 5-10 degrees because at that wind speed, it may be way too much for the rigging to handle.For all other situations, heaving to is much easier way to bring the boat to a control drift. I just wouldn't want to try a heave to when the wind is 50+ knots. I was out in a 50+ knots with just my beam to the wind with bare poles and my boat was heeled over at least 45 degrees. Now the anchor rode being wrapped around the keel may have had something to do with the excessive heal, but I can just imagine what sails up at that time would have done.