My guess
Is that people get a danforth set a little (not backing down on it) and it holds for the current conditions but then the conditions change and up it comes and doesn't reset because of the mud stuck on the flukes. The key with Danforths is to set them hard. The harder you pull a danforth in mud the deeper it goes. You really can't pull a danforth out with proper scope and pulling in the direction you set it in. I was broadside (rode wrapped around keel) to a 50 knot wind for hours and it didn't budge. If the rain holds off, I'll let you know my test results for this weekend of trying to pull it out backwards on a 4:1 scope after being set with a 7:1 scope. I'm very interested in what happens.
Is that people get a danforth set a little (not backing down on it) and it holds for the current conditions but then the conditions change and up it comes and doesn't reset because of the mud stuck on the flukes. The key with Danforths is to set them hard. The harder you pull a danforth in mud the deeper it goes. You really can't pull a danforth out with proper scope and pulling in the direction you set it in. I was broadside (rode wrapped around keel) to a 50 knot wind for hours and it didn't budge. If the rain holds off, I'll let you know my test results for this weekend of trying to pull it out backwards on a 4:1 scope after being set with a 7:1 scope. I'm very interested in what happens.