canalboat.co.uk Canal Boat November 2017 77
TONY BROOKS
What he doesn’t
know about canal
boats just isn’t
worth knowing
PHIL SPEIGHT
The country’s leading
canal painter and
an expert on paint
processes as well
TERRY ROBERTSON
TR Training’s man
really knows how to
handle a boat
MARTIN LUDGATE
Our Deputy Ed is a
guru on all things to
do with canals
ASK THE
EXPERTS
If you have a boating query our team of experts are here to answer it – ask your question online at canalboat.co.uk Alternatively, you can
EMAIL: [email protected] or WRITE TO Canal Boat, Archant Specialist, Evolution House, 2-6 Easthampstead Road, Wokingham, RG40 2EG
‘The boat can
lose drive and
the exhaust
smoke. The cause is often
leaves around the prop’
It’s that time of year again where novice boaters
can become worried by fallen leaves in the
cut and be convinced something major and
expensive has gone wrong with their boat.
The boat can lose drive, the exhaust might
smoke and the engine sound different. The
cause is often leaves packing around the prop
so densely that it can’t function properly. To
confuse matters, as soon as you go into neutral
the leaves float away from the prop so it’s clear
when you look down the weed hatch.
Old hands know that a short burst of astern
is all that is required to displace the leaves so
you get drive back and continue. Unfortunately,
in some cases you have to do this every few
minutes until you get to a less wooded section
of canal. This is all perfectly normal and to
be expected.
It’s also a good time to test the strength of
the antifreeze in the engine and wet central
heating systems. Top up if weaker than 25%.
Do not exceed the recommended life of the
antifreeze; while it will still protect against frost it
might not against corrosion inside the engine.
Ask your questions and get the
answers online at Canal Boat’s
website – what’s more, you
can read other people’s questions and
answers by simply clicking on to
canalboat.co.uk
Ask online...
TONY BROOKS
Technical Consultant
I am considering fitting an anchor to my 56ft
narrowboat in preparation for river cruising.
As I normally travel single-handed, I feel
positioning an anchor at the bow would be not be easily
accessible in the event of an emergency. Is it acceptable
to fit an anchor at the stern? If so, how does one fit it for
easy access and day-to-day storage? Also, what size
and type of anchor would be suitable for my boat?
MARK KNIGHT, via email
TONY REPLIES: Whatever the various
tables etc. say, you need to be able to lift the
anchor and its chain so that will tend to limit
its maximum size. The exact maximum weight will
also depend upon where you stand to recover it and
how strong you are. I suspect 15 to 20kg would be the
maximum most people can recover.
Although you can use an all rope ‘rode’ (which
connects the anchor to the boat), having several metres
of chain at the anchor end helps it set into the bottom
and also adds extra weight. I think the exact lengths are
best left to whoever supplies the anchor.
The type of anchor for a narrowboat is probably not
that important because often it will be acting as a mud
weight. I doubt you would want to afford one of the
expensive light alloy ones.
Most narrowboats seem to use a Danforth-type
anchor because it will stand on end or lay almost flat
so does not get in the way on the boat as other types
can. I wouldn’t advise a grappling hook-type because
although they fold they may bounce over a riverbed
rather than dig in. It’s perfectly acceptable to deploy the
anchor from the stern, but on a trad design stowage
might be a problem. It needs to be ready to deploy in
an instant so the ‘rode’ needs to be permanently fixed
to a strong point on the boat, preferably towards or on
the centre line. This will help the boat avoid taking up
an angle across the current, but on a narrowboat this is
probably not so vital.
On a cruiser or semi-trad the anchor could lie on its
side in brackets alongside the semi-trad seats or the
outer edge of a cruiser stern. You might find there will
be room to store the anchor upright against the back
bulkhead alongside the door on a trad.
Again, use a securing bracket. Don’t assume the
T-stud or dolly will be a strong point unless it is bolted in
from below with a large load spreading washer under
the bolt head. The welded-on ones can snap off under a
heavier than normal load.
Unless you can arrange a chain locker people often
store the ‘rode’ coiled down into a bucket. Rope in first
then the chain. I have also seen it coiled onto the roof
with a Danforth anchor lying flat close to it.
A
Q
Anchors a weigh
How much weight can you lift?
A typical Danforth stowage