what anchor

fordmugg

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Apr 29, 2008
Messages
133
what is the best all around anchor to use ....i have a 17 ft boat with 115 hp mercury thanks
 

erikgreen

Captain
Joined
Jan 8, 2007
Messages
3,105
Re: what anchor

A two to three ton block of concrete with embedded rebar should work in all bottom types and all weather conditions.

If you want to get more specific than that you might want to let us know what type of weather you boat in, river, lake, or ocean, if there's any current, etc.

If all you do is boat in calm conditions on small lakes, then likely almost any anchor will work. As a good all-around anchor a lot of people like the danforth types or fortress.

Erik
 

CATransplant

Admiral
Joined
Feb 26, 2005
Messages
6,319
Re: what anchor

There is no best anchor for all purposes. It all depends on where you boat, and what the bottoms are like there. If you can answer that, we can answer your question.
 

fordmugg

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Apr 29, 2008
Messages
133
Re: what anchor

i boat mostly lakes and couple of times the river
 

brunolund

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jan 26, 2008
Messages
424
Re: what anchor

i'm a big fan of the folding grapple-hook style. they are easy to store, and lightweight. i use a 15 pounder for my 18 1/2 footer in the red river with some decent current. i also have a 10 pounder on our 19 foot pontoon. they both hold great.river or lake.
 

CATransplant

Admiral
Joined
Feb 26, 2005
Messages
6,319
Re: what anchor

i boat mostly lakes and couple of times the river


C'mon...help us out. What lakes? What river? What's the bottom like on both? What will you be doing while at anchor? Fishing?

For muck bottoms in lakes, I like mushroom anchors. They work on muddy river bottoms, too. Rocks are something else again.

You don't have to be stingy with words. They're cheap. ;)
 

Navy Jr.

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Sep 14, 2007
Messages
738
Re: what anchor

To answer the original question, a good "all around" anchor is the Richter anchor by Greenfield in Ohio. Comes in various weights, but for your boat a 14 lb woud do the job. Handles a variety of different bottom types (mud, rocks, weeds, sand) and requires less scope (3 to 1 versus normal 7 to 1). It's also easy to retrieve. Got ours at Gander Mtn. www.greenfieldproducts.com
 

Coors

Captain
Joined
Dec 8, 2006
Messages
3,367
Re: what anchor

To answer the original question, a good "all around" anchor is the Richter anchor by Greenfield in Ohio. Comes in various weights, but for your boat a 14 lb woud do the job. Handles a variety of different bottom types (mud, rocks, weeds, sand) and requires less scope (3 to 1 versus normal 7 to 1). It's also easy to retrieve. Got ours at Gander Mtn. www.greenfieldproducts.com

Mods Spam?
 

Boatist

Rear Admiral
Joined
Apr 22, 2002
Messages
4,552
Re: what anchor

On boat I have had over the years I found the danforth to be very good.
A 8 pound with 4 foot of chain worked great on our 21 foot boat. In one lake we fish and Play in that has a hard bottom it would sometimes drag some before digging in.
Also when we fish in the fog down in the San Francisco Bay area the wife does not like to drive the boat up on anchor when she can not see something to guide on so when we were alone she would get stuck pulling the anchor. That 8 pound anchor with 4 feet of chain pulled deep in the mud from 5 knots currents was all she could do. Even with Gloves it hert her hands and My pride so we looked for another anchor. When she did get it off the bottom she could still just bearly pull it up. It would come up covered in mud.

We found the Fortress FX-7 4 pound anchor rated for 27 foot boats.
The price was kind of high but after reading the Navy test and the Power Boat test I had to try it.
I bought it and 2 feet of chain and 250 feet of line. Took it up to the the lake with the hard bottom and to our suprise in dug in faster and held better than any anchor we had ever used. Down in the bay same thing dug in fast and held all day. First time the wife pulled it when it lifted off the bottom she almost fell over and accused me of attaching the line incorrectly as the anchor came loose. To her surprise it was on there and she could pull it with ease. Even better it was clean with no mud on it.
We have always carried 2 anchor and still do but have never ever used any other anchor since.

The Fortress FX-7 is 4 pounds made of Aluminum - magnesium alloy with a Anodized finish. It is light and the flutes are sharpened to dig in fast. It will not rust and mud does not stick to the slick finish. The shank is thinner and has tapered edges to allow it to sink deeper under load.
For us is it is the best anchor ever and worth every penny.

It does have one thing that some people do not like.
Since the anchor is so light You can not pull up to your spot and put the engine in reverse and lower the anchor. Since it is so light it will stay up off the bottom almost like a fishing lure and never hit bottom.

So to use this anchor instead you come up on your spot and put the motor in reverse like normal but as soon as you get some sternway you take the motor out of gear. You lower the anchor until it hits bottom then can put motor back in reverse if required and pay out proper scope. Tie it off and it will dig in as soon as the line gets tight.

We actually like this problem because we use it to our advantage. The lake I talked about with the hard bottom we like to have out about 100 feet of line or a little less. At this lake we fish and later will go and anchor near shore to Eat, Rest and Swim. We anchor with the bow pointed to open water and back into a beach where we attach a stern line to shore. I was never very good at saying drop it now we are 100 feet out. If get More than 100 feet out the bow will tend to swing side to side more and also fishermen sometimes hook out anchor line.

So with this anchor we pull out 100 feet of line and tie it to the bow cleat. We pick our beach and out in deeper water put the motor in reverse. Gain some stern way and lower the anchor the anchor will not go down until we reduce out stern way. I back into the beach with our kicker motor and when within a few feet of shore kill the kicker and raise kicker and step off the boat with an attached stern line. as the boat slows the anchor settles to the bottom I tie off the stern line and get back on the boat and pull the bow line tight and it dig in right where I want it. Adjust the disiance form shore with the stern line and we are set for the day.

http://www.iboats.com/Fortress_Anch...211610479--**********.625808170--view_id.4943

Check out some of the test data on the left side of the page.

http://www.fortressanchors.com/
 

cuddydogs

Cadet
Joined
May 24, 2008
Messages
6
Re: what anchor

I just picked up a Richter Anchor, put on 3 feet of chain, and LOVE it! I have a cuddy and like to stay in one place overnight on the water, and I like my Richter
 

Nandy

Commander
Joined
Apr 10, 2004
Messages
2,145
Re: what anchor

C'mon...help us out. What lakes? What river? What's the bottom like on both? What will you be doing while at anchor? Fishing?

For muck bottoms in lakes, I like mushroom anchors. They work on muddy river bottoms, too. Rocks are something else again.

You don't have to be stingy with words. They're cheap. ;)

Cat is not trying to be rude or anything. To give you advice on what anchor to use not knowing the boat size, the bottom where you anchor and the usual conditions (windy, current) will be hit and miss as anchors are built to address those issues.
For example, a fluke anchor will do great in sandy bottoms or soft mud bottoms but it will be close to useless in rocky bottoms and in bottoms with large rocks or coral (please, dont anchor on coral reefs) you might loose it there because it design will more than likely make it get stuck. So let us know the conditions of your boating and we can help you better.
 

Navy Jr.

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Sep 14, 2007
Messages
738
Re: what anchor

Mods Spam?

If my previous reply (please view above) implies that I'm trying to promote the Richter anchor for my own financial advantage, my apologies. I was simply reading from the tag that I removed from the anchor. It provided information that I felt would be helpful to the original poster.

No, I don't work for Greenfield Products; and, yes, I paid retail price for the anchor ($49.99+tax).
 

stevewolverton

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Mar 30, 2008
Messages
262
Re: what anchor

To answer the original question, a good "all around" anchor is the Richter anchor by Greenfield in Ohio.

I'd seen one of those in the local Academy store here in Houston. The thing looks scary! I want one. :D
 
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