Pete the Cat
Sustaining Member
Just a comment on the comment. Most recreational windlasses are not strong enough to withstand the breakout or backdown of anchoring. I am sure that you, like me have done this and managed to get away with it. Once or twice or more. Breakout or backdown should be done with the chain or rode secured in a stopper or on a cleat with most recreational windlasses. The bearings are simply not designed for this kind of pressure. Don't ask how I learned this. After rebuilding my windlass, I read the manual. Yup. It advises against it. Since then, I have read several of them. Most of them say that the windlass' purpose is the deployment and retrieval of the anchor and rode--not the break out or backdown process to set it. When you take the gear box apart to rebuild it (many brands have the same Italian gear drives) will see why. I have pictures of the damage and the rebuild process.Maybe it's just me, but about the only time I wish I had a windless is when breaking the anchor loose off the bottom.
On those (rare) occasions when pulling the boat up and shortening the rode to vertical requires some help, I've run the rode through a snatch block on the midships rail and led it back to one of the cockpit primary winches. So far, has done the trick, and once the anchor is off the bottom it has been easy enough to bring it on board at the bow as normal.
$.02