Please select your home edition
Edition
Hyde Sails 2024 - One Design

The Truth about Snubbers

by Mike McEvoy/Sail-World Cruising on 27 Oct 2006
The Simple Snubber SW
No, I don’t mean someone who won’t return your ‘Good Morning’ greeting – I mean the device for protecting the anchor winch from strain in a bucking sea. Here Mike McEvoy from Middle Harbour Yacht Club gives a rundown on the value and method of using this vital yet simple piece of gear:

On a boat that has an anchor winch there are often two parts to the winch assembly. One part is to deal with anchor chain and the other, called the gypsy, deals with a rope rode or anchor line.

Some boats have rope attached to the boat end of the anchor chain so that once all the anchor chain is deployed the rope then holds the boat to the anchor. Many times, when anchoring in shallower water of course, only part of the anchor chain will be required for the anchor to hold the boat.

If the anchor chain is left on the winch drum the winch is taking all the strain of the pull from the anchor with potentially expensive damage to the gearing of the winch.

The solution is the Snubber, being a length of braided nylon rope with a loop in one end, usually spliced back on itself creating an 'eye' to hook on to a deck cleat. The other end has a purpose designed 'hook' (known as a Chain Grab Hook) that fits over the chain. The hook must be the right size for the chain - to purchase take a piece of the anchor chain or measure length and width of a link to get a hook that fits your anchor chain. Ideally the (galvanized or stainless) hook is secured to the end of the snubber rope through a metal thimble to reduce chafe on the rope.

A clevis Grab Hook pin makes it easy to attach the hook through the thimble.
Once the anchor chain has been deployed to the skipper’s satisfaction the hook of the snubber is hooked to the anchor chain just forward of the bow roller with the other looped end over the deck cleat on the deck near the bow. Your boat may have a 'Samson post' i.e. a strong point to which that you normally secure the boat’s mooring.

However, most modern production boats have a cleat on the side deck either side of the bow near the toe rail and that is where the snubber is set.

Having hooked up the snubber, keep some tension on the snubber line while you let out sufficient anchor chain to allow the snubber rope to take the full strain of the anchor. Now the strain is off the anchor winch and onto the snubber rope, which, because it has some give in it, eases the 'snubbing' action as the boat pulls back and forward on the anchor line.

The catenary, which is the dip in the anchor chain below the snubber rope, might only be a few centimeters, but could be much more – say half a metre if the swell conditions warrant it.

The snubber rope should be no more than two metres long and strong enough to
take the weight of the boat in a strong breeze. If the snubber rope breaks, anchor winch remains on the winch drum ready to take the strain if the snubber fails.

A cautious sailor, particularly in a strongly bucking sea and/or a high wind, will add two safety measures. He/she will use a much longer snubber to offer additional stretch (say six metres instead of two), and also put out a second snubber in case the primary snubber fails, to prevent the load coming onto the anchor winch.

Many long-range cruising boats put down a snubber as a matter of habit whenever riding at anchor.

If you can’t splice go to your favorite boatshed and ask them to do the two splices, one for the thimble and the other for the loop, which obviously must be big enough to fit over the strong point on the bow of your boat.

Sail-World Cruising would like to thank the www.mhyc.com.au!Middle_Harbour_Yacht_Club! for allowing the use of information from Mike McEvoy’s article from their regular magazine Compass Rose.

The diagrams used in this story are courtesy of Bosun Supplies , who manufacture professionally made snubbers and would welcome your custom.

Henri-Lloyd Dynamic RangeNoble Marine 2022 SW - FOOTERCrewsaver 2021 Safetyline FOOTER

Related Articles

Explore The Remarkable Cure 55
Join Cure Marine co-founder Dave Biggar for an exclusive walkthrough Since her launch, the Cure 55 has been turning heads and earning widespread praise. Sailors have been impressed by her balanced feel, sharp responsiveness, and exhilarating performance - reaching over 21 knots SOG in just 17 knots of breeze.
Posted today at 4:00 am
Hyde Sails Job Vacancies
Yacht Sales Representative and Sales & Marketing Assistant required Hyde Sails are pleased to be hiring for two positions based in our Hamble Sales Office. Established in 1964, Hyde Sails manufacture around 40,000 sails per year from our modern factory in the far east.
Posted on 2 May
Oyster Yachts announces the Oyster 805
A superyacht inspired bluewater cruiser Oyster Yachts has announced the latest addition to their fleet, the Oyster 805.
Posted on 2 May
Meet the Grand Soleil Blue
The ultimate weekender with a sustainable build Grand Soleil Yachts has taken its first step on a new path with the launch of its first true weekender, the Grand Soleil Blue.
Posted on 30 Apr
OOC delivers $133 billion for ocean action
Urgent challenges remain to meet global deadlines in a pivotal year for the ocean The Our Ocean Conference (OOC) has mobilized $133 billion in funding for ocean action over the past decade, according to a new report launched today by World Resources Institute (WRI) to mark the conference's 10th anniversary.
Posted on 29 Apr
Ella Hibbert starts Solo Arctic Circumnavigation
A record-breaking voyage to spotlight a vanishing Arctic British sailor embarks on a record-breaking voyage to spotlight a vanishing Arctic and spark global climate action.
Posted on 29 Apr
MMAG calls for vigilance and reporting
Seasonal alert and call to action survey for all mariners and offshore sailors As spring awakens in the Northern Hemisphere, a powerful migration is under way - not just of boats returning north from winter sailing grounds in the Caribbean, but of whales traveling thousands of miles.
Posted on 29 Apr
A look inside the Spirit Yachts yard
A close look at what makes their yachts unique Traditional skills in boatbuilding could be regarded as a lost art from a bygone era. In the world of fibreglass and carbon, the joinery and laminating techniques of wood ribs and cedar strips are a thing of the past.
Posted on 28 Apr
85th Anniversary of Operation Dynamo drawing near
Preparations are progressing well for the sailing from Ramsgate to Dunkirk The date for the Association of Dunkirk Little Ships (ADLS) fleet sailing from Ramsgate to Dunkirk is drawing ever nearer, and preparations are progressing well for this, the Dynamo 85 return.
Posted on 27 Apr
Grand Soleil Blue: Finally in the water
Designed for those who want to enjoy sailing in total independence The official video of the Grand Soleil BLUE is now online: a yacht that redefines the concept of contemporary sailing: free, spontaneous, elegant, and sustainable.
Posted on 26 Apr