Why a Windlass?
Don't know how bad your shoulders are, and hope you feel better.We've seen altogether too many people use their windlasses to pull their boats up to the anchor.Why do that, when there is an engine to do that to begin with? It's usually on by that time anyway, isn't it?Last weekend, we were anchored in a wind against tide situation. To "de-anchor" we simply ran up along the anchor line, pulling the rode though as we moved up VERY slowly (at idle in forward).When the rode was straight up, we disengaged the forward engine to neutral, and we stopped, and let the boat set back again, and then repeated the process.It only took two of these to be directly above the anchor, and when I pulled up on the straight down anchor rode, it came up easily, and the anchor popped (boy, was I glad we'd just put the dinghy on deck and I had somewhere to sit, instead of falling on my kiester right on the foredeck!)When there is no wind, just pull in the anchor line a small bit at a time, go back aft and get some more coffee, and do it again, and again. Who's in a hurry?A windlass is a very heavy duty maintenance item, to say nothing of the electrical system implications.I suggest you consider the non-invasive, stres-free possibilities already available.Our boat is a C34. I'm 56 and don't like pulling any kinda strings that require kind of heavy heaving.One time we ended pulling up a major underwater telephone cable with our anchor. Since the abovementioned techniques didn't work at first, we used the anchor lines led back to the primary winches. The winches pulled the telephone cable right up. Long story, want a copy let me know, but there are less costly and very useful, non-stressful alternatives than windlasses.What's the hurry?PS: Yes, there may be a hurry if the weather changes and you're in a bad spot. Whole different story, and the answer could be simply tripping and floating your anchor line for retrieval later.