My Danforth anchor wont set. My boat is a 16 Starcraft Super Sport with a 50 hp Merc engine. The typical anchoring scenario is as follows: Adirondack Lakes or Lake Ontario. Sand bottom and sand shore. About 100 feet out the water is waist deep and gradually gets more shallow toward shore. The plan is to set the anchor about 100 feet out, swing the boat around and then set a shore tie-point to keep the boat from swinging. I have never been able to achieve thishaving to beach the boat while camping and suffer the usual consequences of wind and wave.
The anchor just drags along on one stock and fluke, refusing to dig in. I have tried to set it manually (out of the boat) with different chain and rope lengths to no avail. If I shove it in with my feet and then put a load on it, the flukes end up perpendicular to the bottom and only half sunk in, and it wont take much of a pull to break it freethen it just drags along.
I have talked to many boaters and marina operators and none has a solution or reason. A friend of mine had the same problem, got rid of the offending anchor and bought another Danforththis time one made out of aluminum, although he did not specifically ask for aluminumand it worked fine.
I am attaching a picture of the anchor. If I had to make a wild guess as to what the problem is, I would think that it isnt sharp enough to penetrate the sand. However, I would think that sharpening it would ruin the galvanize and would make it a bit dangerous to have around.
Does anyone have any ideas or a solution?
Stu Culp
The anchor just drags along on one stock and fluke, refusing to dig in. I have tried to set it manually (out of the boat) with different chain and rope lengths to no avail. If I shove it in with my feet and then put a load on it, the flukes end up perpendicular to the bottom and only half sunk in, and it wont take much of a pull to break it freethen it just drags along.
I have talked to many boaters and marina operators and none has a solution or reason. A friend of mine had the same problem, got rid of the offending anchor and bought another Danforththis time one made out of aluminum, although he did not specifically ask for aluminumand it worked fine.
I am attaching a picture of the anchor. If I had to make a wild guess as to what the problem is, I would think that it isnt sharp enough to penetrate the sand. However, I would think that sharpening it would ruin the galvanize and would make it a bit dangerous to have around.
Does anyone have any ideas or a solution?
Stu Culp