Subject: How much anchor line/rode has been deployed ?
In the past I've placed 50-foot markers on my anchor line/rode to allow me to know how much has been deployed when anchoring. Over time these 50-foot markers are in such a bad shape (worn out, detached and missing and so on) that I could not rely on them.
Then, after getting some good ideas here about how to know when trim tabs are fully retracted by using a seconds counting method I thought I could use the same approach for when deploying my anchor line/rode.
The chain is 50-feet so when deploying the chain I count the seconds for it to be fully deployed and then for the line/rode deployment I use the same number of counts for deploying each 50 feet of line/rode. This to me is a far simpler method and I can abandon the use of physical 50-foot markers in the line/rode that, as I already mentioned, get destroyed and become missing over time. Even being off by a few feet using this method is of no real consequence IMO.
In the past I've placed 50-foot markers on my anchor line/rode to allow me to know how much has been deployed when anchoring. Over time these 50-foot markers are in such a bad shape (worn out, detached and missing and so on) that I could not rely on them.
Then, after getting some good ideas here about how to know when trim tabs are fully retracted by using a seconds counting method I thought I could use the same approach for when deploying my anchor line/rode.
The chain is 50-feet so when deploying the chain I count the seconds for it to be fully deployed and then for the line/rode deployment I use the same number of counts for deploying each 50 feet of line/rode. This to me is a far simpler method and I can abandon the use of physical 50-foot markers in the line/rode that, as I already mentioned, get destroyed and become missing over time. Even being off by a few feet using this method is of no real consequence IMO.