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Need help with anchor

Colin W

Jet Boat Lover
Messages
14
Reaction score
5
Points
67
Location
NE Pennsylvania
Boat Make
Glastron
Year
2014
Boat Model
GT
Boat Length
19
Looking to buy an anchor for by glastron GT187. Looking for suggestions or info. This is our first boat
 
Do you know what the bottom is like where you normally boat?


I boat in a sandy/mud bottom, I use a medium box anchor and LOVE it, throw it and forget about it, even with a short line and wind it hasn't moved,
 
Hard to say, the lake I normally boat at is 50-60 ft, I would assume it’s mud but cant say for sure
 
Would you be anchoring on a regular basis in 50-60' of water? Many anchor near beaches, islands and shoreline is why I ask.

Many will recommend 3x - 4x the rope of your average anchoring depth. That's a lot of rope.
 
It’s a very weird natural lake that has drop
Offs and stuff, there are private docks and lake houses on most of the shallow spots.
 
I use a small box anchor in deep water with a lot of other boats around and a light 13lb mantis in the shallow waters when I'm chilling. They both work well and set fast.
 
Unless the bottom is fairly consistent, I'd suggest you consider having a couple of anchors on board. I use the Danforth anchor that came with the boat (7 times out of 10 a worthless piece of crap that doesn't hold) and a small box anchor that I got at the end of last season. In the sandy bottom around here the box anchor is incredibly good. Plus, having/using two anchors can help in tight or windy situations...
 
I've used the Box Anchor on my Yamaha's and there's only been one time that thing hasn't held (20MPH gusts can do that). I like the fact that it only requires 2:1 scope as that's a lot less rode to carry around.

I'm not sure if you have an anchor locker on your GT, but on my 242, hang the folded box anchor off a piece of rebar and it fits perfect. I basically cut a 24" piece or rebar down to fit the holder and then put some spray-on truck bed liner (found in the spray paint area of Lowe's) and it's held up surprisingly well with no rust.

Another tip I've done on mine is I use a sharpie and at 10' I put a 1" stripe on the rode. At 20' is I did two stripes, 30 - 3. When I got to 60', I repeated with 1 stripe and continued the basic theme up to 130'. I usually anchor in 15-20 feet of water and when I ask someone to give me 40' of line, they know that's about 4-5 stripes. that takes the guess work out of how much line is out.
 
Marking the rope... Ingenious!!!
 
Thanks. I have to re-mark it about every 2 years...

But for the fact that there's never an argument about how much line is out. Totally worth it!
 
I agree. Sometimes it is the simplest things that make a big difference. I'll be marking mine now! :winkingthumbsup"
 
and the best part is...the boss won't complain about the "cost" of that Mod. All it takes is a Sharpie!
 
8# Rocna Vulcan for me. I have used it in weedy bottoms, sandy bottoms, & mud bottoms. In every setting it sets instantly with a 2.5-3x scope & I mean it SETS. Fairly certain I wouldn’t be able to drag it at WOT. Expensive but well worth it after I lost my keys off a island beach right near the main shipping channel & was stranded there until police boat took my gf back & forth to shore to get the spare keys.
 
Other than the pain of the heavy weight, I use a coated 20lbs Navy Anchor with 6ft of stainless chain. It's quite compact, and holds really well!!! It's just heavy, but it fits in the anchor compartment, which some others do not. I have had the Navy Anchor drag a bit with very large swells when anchored facing big swells from large tankers in an island facing the ship channel. It reholds right away, so I've been thinking of trying the 17lbs Mantus or 13lbs Rocna. (Have not yet decided) The 20lbs Navy anchor is around $40 or less at Academy if there is one near you. As I said, It's not as popular due to the weight, but I find it a worthy anchor. I have a 20lbs for main, and a 10lbs for the stern, or emergency as needed if I lose the big one.
 
OK, quick follow up on the anchor thread. I anchored our 242 in 20mph gusts on Saturday. It slid the first time, but I reset it and held all afternoon. The issue was the rear anchor was allowing swing, and where there is swing there was extra force pulling up the box anchor.

Once properly anchored in the rear to eliminate the swing, the box did it's job very well.

And by the way, my family and friends have renamed the box anchor. It is now referred to as "The Bear Trap" Holy crap is that thing intimidating to pull out of the anchor locker and unfold. It's good we have SeaDek on the anchor locker door, as it sits right there while I unfold it each time. I'm always scared of pinching little fingers in the hinges while doing so.

But it works, period.
 
It's tricky to use a rear anchor with others that are not using one. They will swing and you won't, so they might hit you as they swing when the wind changes.


How big is your box anchor?

Thanks for sharing! Glad it held!
 
Other than the pain of the heavy weight, I use a coated 20lbs Navy Anchor with 6ft of stainless chain. It's quite compact, and holds really well!!! It's just heavy, but it fits in the anchor compartment, which some others do not. I have had the Navy Anchor drag a bit with very large swells when anchored facing big swells from large tankers in an island facing the ship channel. It reholds right away, so I've been thinking of trying the 17lbs Mantus or 13lbs Rocna. (Have not yet decided) The 20lbs Navy anchor is around $40 or less at Academy if there is one near you. As I said, It's not as popular due to the weight, but I find it a worthy anchor. I have a 20lbs for main, and a 10lbs for the stern, or emergency as needed if I lose the big one.

I second this anchor. Use it for my AR190 and it holds like a champ. Was in the Ohio in 4-5mph current with a stiff downstream breeze this weekend. Tossed it out in ~30ft of water, gave it 36ft of additional line (10 arm lengths) once it hit bottom, tied it off through the bow eye to the forward port cleat, and forgot about it for ~3hrs. I've yet to have it NOT hold for me. It's a bit heavy, but fits in the locker easily, and is super cheap.
 
It's tricky to use a rear anchor with others that are not using one. They will swing and you won't, so they might hit you as they swing when the wind changes.


How big is your box anchor?

Thanks for sharing! Glad it held!

I'm not sure how they are sized. But I would say it's the 12" x 12" model. Once folded, you have to twist it slightly to get it in the anchor locker, but it fits nicely. Unfolded, it's foot by foot. It doesn't seem like much, but it digs fast and holds. My second is a traditional coated navy anchor as mentioned above. It's a nice safe rear anchor, as if you step on it, you will only stub your toe. Not grab you like a wild bear in the wilderness! Left to chew your leg off..... OK I will stop.
 
I sense some concern on the ability of your extremities to survive contact with the bear trap, but I might be misreading it.... :-)

Sounds like a worthy bow anchor.
 
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