The Snatch Test

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024

Комментарии • 12

  • @Ozbullwinkle
    @Ozbullwinkle 13 лет назад +1

    I just love your anchors. I got sick and tired of our CQR just lying on its side and dragging across the bottom. Have replaced it with a Super Sarca on a 36 foot flybridge gamefishing vessel and couldn't be happier. It sets first time every time!

  • @ggkoyuy
    @ggkoyuy Год назад

    The best one looks like a Rockna Vulcan

  • @blokefromthebush
    @blokefromthebush 7 лет назад +2

    Interesting testing cheers lads

  • @Drrrre
    @Drrrre 4 года назад

    Any thoughts on Sarca vs. Spade?

  • @Epic_daze
    @Epic_daze 7 лет назад +4

    the problem with your testing is its not taking scope into considerations and all the pulls are horizontal, testing an anchor with a scope of 3 in comparison to 5 is what is actually required to demonstrate holding power as well as reversing the load 180 degrees so it simulates a tide change . clogging of anchor flukes when forces are applied at 180 degrees( during a tide change ) can break free many poor designed anchors

    • @nickshaw2768
      @nickshaw2768 7 лет назад +1

      Pat trick
      You are quite right that kg is a mass, measure, not a force measure. In this case however, kg is being used as shorthand for the force, N, generated by that mass at the earth' surface. It is a common usage in countries that use SI units but a bit confusing to the rest of us.
      John Ramsden, P Eng.(ret'd)

  • @tuco0x
    @tuco0x 8 лет назад +3

    Informative video. But I gotta say, guys, what metric system are you using there down-under? Do they teach you guys in the schools of engineering and science that the unit for load, tension, weight and force is kilograms? When I consult the SI Metric system of units I see the fundamental units for weight and force is kilograms - meter per second square and given a special name, Newton. It is not numerically same as kilograms.
    If you guys gave one of your anchor test loads in a unit of mass (kg) to an engineer and asked him to calculate some reaction forces of something it was pulling on would he or she not first convert that kilograms to a real force or weight? I bet they would so why repurpose the poor unit of mass (kg) into some something that it's both not and technically wrong and enter the modern age of the metric system. I hear arguments that gravity doesn't matter and we can just hand-wave it away. But that is not how the metric system defines weight and force in addition to the problem using kilograms for weight and force in today's analytics.

    • @rados123
      @rados123 7 лет назад +2

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilogram-force

  • @elconquistador7363
    @elconquistador7363 Год назад +2

    Click bait!! Deceiving title. This video is about testing anchors!

  • @brianoliver521
    @brianoliver521 Год назад

    This test does not emulate boat anchoring. Boats are pulling at 45 degrees more or less. Not parallel with the bottom.

    • @svennoren9047
      @svennoren9047 5 месяцев назад

      They do if you use a boat length of chain closest to the anchor and slpice in your line to that.