|
|
16-02-2012, 18:17
|
#16
|
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Annapolis MD
Boat: Building a Max Cruise 44 hybrid electric cat
Posts: 3,227
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
Quote:
Originally Posted by casual
Fun Johnson,where do you find Crosby C links,Seaeched the site nothing liste.Thanks for the help
|
Here you go ( click here)
|
|
|
16-02-2012, 18:18
|
#17
|
always in motion is the future
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: in paradise
Boat: Sundeer 64
Posts: 19,164
|
For 3/8" chain you can buy this link:
It feeds well as the link-distance is correct. It is G70 rated, 6,600lb. I got it from West Marine in the standard G70 gold-colored finishing. Sprayed it with cold galvanize.
ciao!
Nick.
__________________
Its a trap! - Admiral Ackbar.
|
|
|
17-02-2012, 04:50
|
#18
|
Marine Service Provider
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Stuart Fl
Boat: Cabo Rico 38
Posts: 726
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
I,have thought of using Dyneema line I,use this line to secure my bridle to 3 strand using loop's.How would you knot the line on chain?Seem's unlikely as the knot would pertrude and not pass thru the gypsy.
|
|
|
17-02-2012, 06:08
|
#19
|
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Brisbane Australia [until the boats launched]
Boat: 50ft powercat, light,long and low powered
Posts: 4,409
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
I looked at doing this and it wasnt very expensive to get a proper link welded in at the local chain manufacturer.
Even a decent welding shop should be able to do a better than c link job
|
|
|
17-02-2012, 07:34
|
#20
|
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Annapolis MD
Boat: Building a Max Cruise 44 hybrid electric cat
Posts: 3,227
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
Quote:
Originally Posted by casual
I,have thought of using Dyneema line I,use this line to secure my bridle to 3 strand using loop's.How would you knot the line on chain?Seem's unlikely as the knot would pertrude and not pass thru the gypsy.
|
Mine is just a back-up to the c-link, but it's spliced on one side and knotted a stitched on the other. With it only being three links, my windlass just slides right past those with no problem.
|
|
|
17-02-2012, 07:51
|
#21
|
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Houston
Boat: 01 Catana 401
Posts: 9,626
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
Quote:
Originally Posted by s/v Jedi
For 3/8" chain you can buy this link:
It feeds well as the link-distance is correct. It is G70 rated, 6,600lb. I got it from West Marine in the standard G70 gold-colored finishing. Sprayed it with cold galvanize.
ciao!
Nick.
|
through a horizontal or vertical windlass? I think mine would choke on that, but have never tried.
|
|
|
17-02-2012, 08:08
|
#22
|
always in motion is the future
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: in paradise
Boat: Sundeer 64
Posts: 19,164
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sailmonkey
through a horizontal or vertical windlass? I think mine would choke on that, but have never tried.
|
Vertical windlass. As you can see, the link maintains precise distance between the end-links of both lengths of chain.
ciao!
Nick.
|
|
|
17-02-2012, 08:38
|
#23
|
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Houston
Boat: 01 Catana 401
Posts: 9,626
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
Quote:
Originally Posted by s/v Jedi
Vertical windlass. As you can see, the link maintains precise distance between the end-links of both lengths of chain.
ciao!
Nick.
|
I'll be dammed
It just looks like the extra bulk will cause hell....but now I need to know if ours will suck this up!!
|
|
|
17-02-2012, 08:44
|
#24
|
always in motion is the future
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: in paradise
Boat: Sundeer 64
Posts: 19,164
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sailmonkey
I'll be dammed
It just looks like the extra bulk will cause hell....but now I need to know if ours will suck this up!!
|
On a horizontal windlass where the chain only touches 90 degrees of the wheel, the link might jump out but on a vertical where the wheel grabs 180 degrees of chain, that will not happen.
ciao!
Nick.
|
|
|
17-02-2012, 09:15
|
#25
|
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Philippines in the winters
Boat: Its in French Polynesia now
Posts: 11,369
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
Quote:
Originally Posted by casual
Fun Johnson,where do you find Crosby C links,Seaeched the site nothing liste.Thanks for the help
|
McMaster-Carr
__________________
Faithful are the Wounds of a Friend, but the Kisses of the Enemy are Deceitful! ........
The measure of a man is how he navigates to a proper shore in the midst of a storm!
|
|
|
17-02-2012, 09:41
|
#26
|
CLOD
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: being planted in Jacksonville Fl
Boat: none
Posts: 20,455
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
Quote:
Originally Posted by s/v Jedi
For 3/8" chain you can buy this link:
It feeds well as the link-distance is correct. It is G70 rated, 6,600lb. I got it from West Marine in the standard G70 gold-colored finishing. Sprayed it with cold galvanize.
ciao!
Nick.
|
What's it called as I don't remember seeing it when I was on the WM site. maybe they have a 5/16" one.
maybe I'll just cheap out for a a while and get some BBB chain instead of the G4 as I don't expect to be in a big blow doing mostly weekend sails the next few years. In which case there isn't really any loss by using 1 of those C-links
__________________
Don't ask a bunch of unknown forum people if it is OK to do something on YOUR boat. It is your boat, do what you want!
|
|
|
17-02-2012, 11:07
|
#27
|
Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Ireland, French canals/Med/Spain
Boat: Birchwood Centre Cockpit 33, Broom Shannon Class 42 flybridge.
Posts: 480
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
Hiya,
Depending on where you are moored/based I would try and go to a local rigging company that services industrial lifting gear for cranes and hoists. they sell or will obtain a rivetted link, this comes in two halves, which as the name suggests are rivetted together and are as strong as the rest of the chain. because there are no protrusions they will pass over a winch in the same way as your original chain. I use James Mc Gregor in Belfast and get great service.
Good Luck.
Irish Rambler.
|
|
|
16-03-2012, 13:11
|
#28
|
CLOD
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: being planted in Jacksonville Fl
Boat: none
Posts: 20,455
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
So .................. decided to just bite the bullet and get 275 feet of new 5/16" G4 chain. Got a reasonable good price via Port Supply. I still ended up with a "weak" link as I got a swivel and it is only rated to about 1/2 the load of the chain.
I also was going to just add it to my existing rode so got one of those hammer links, which turns out is rated the same as the swivel. But I figure I would rarely have the rode out enough to even have that connecting link matter.
But West Marine apparently can not measure very good because once I laid it out to mark I found out I have 350 feet of the new chain (which made the chain only $2.69/ft). Now I'm trying to decide if I want to just use the old rode for a secondary anchor.
And I don't have a lot of faith in the paint sticking to the chain and am thinking of spending another $240 on a chain counter to just finish the project up and be done with it (yeah right).
__________________
Don't ask a bunch of unknown forum people if it is OK to do something on YOUR boat. It is your boat, do what you want!
|
|
|
16-03-2012, 14:58
|
#29
|
CF Adviser Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Virginia
Boat: Island Packet 380, now sold
Posts: 8,943
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
Don,
Put cable ties on the links at intervals that you choose. They hold up pretty well and are easy to spot as they go out of the chain locker. You can put one, two, three, etc. (even on different sides) to designate the lengths, and/or alternate white and black.
p.s West Marine reads this forum and will be sending you a bill for the extra chain.
__________________
Hud
|
|
|
16-03-2012, 15:05
|
#30
|
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2010
Boat: Pearson, 28-1
Posts: 153
|
Re: Joining Chain #5
Hud3,
When you put on cable ties do you trim them or leave them long?
That may be a dumb question but when I put them on mine I left them long as they are even easier to see and seem less likely to jab my hands as I handle the chain (as I construct a chain locker and setup the roller etc. etc.)
I'll be stowing my new chain in the locker in the next few days and it's time to trim the ties if that's the better setup. I don't have a windlass at this point so that's not a consideration.
Thanks,
|
|
|
|
|
Thread Tools |
Search this Thread |
|
|
Display Modes |
Rate This Thread |
Linear Mode
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
|
Advertise Here
Recent Discussions |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Vendor Spotlight |
|
|
|
|
|