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I won't comment on the anchor choices or logistics of anchoring but I have some thoughts on the installation of a windlass.
It is likely that the P36 foredeck construction is like the P35. And like the 10M. The 3/4 plywood core running down the center is about 7" wide. I think it was for the bow cleat and for a foredeck track should the boat be setup for spinnaker. If you have that track it is very likely that the plywood core is already delaminated and shot from water intrusion. Also likely around the bow cleat mounting. Especially if the boat has lived on a mooring for much of it's life and the mounting of the cleat was never re-done.
For any windlass mount I would add a significant backing plate in a similar manner to what I did on my 10M for the jib boom. See details here:
http://dan.pfeiffer.net/10m/hoyt_jib_boom_install_details.htm
This job is fairly straightforward but not easy with challenging access to the forepeak. To do this right requires some careful planning and execution and a lot of prep work. But it is manageable. And you may have a different idea about what is sufficient for this sort of thing.
The only manual windlass I have seen that was vertical (handle spins in horizontal plane) is the Anchorman (Lewmar). They are discontinued since 2006? and very hard to find. They came in two versions, both with gypsy and one also with a drum (like a winch). I have the unit with the drum that I got new about 15 years ago. I have yet to install it as I basically never anchor in my current boating circumstances. But it is on the list to facilitate more extended cruising in the future. Photo here of it on my foredeck:
http://dan.pfeiffer.net/10m/anchor_windlass_test_fit_01.jpg
Spotted this on ebay:
https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_from=R40&_trksid=p2047675.m570.l1313&_nkw=384354960514&_sacat=0
From the description this seems like a unit intended to have a motor but if it can function as a manual unit without the motor this is fairly close to the Anchorman. But I don't know if it can do that. Sort of looks like the shaft that would go below deck to the motor was cut off... Look at the photos. If it will function as a proper manual windlass the price is probably good and in line with the Anchorman when it was still available.
https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_from=R40&_trksid=p2047675.m570.l1313&_nkw=384354960514&_sacat=0
Dan Pfeiffer
On 2021-10-26 12:18 pm, 'Peter Ogilvie' via pearson-boats wrote:
If your foredeck was constructed like my P35 there is a plywood core running back from bow to cabin side. Assume it's there to strengthen the lay up for windlass installations. Mention that just so you are aware if you've thought about mounting a windlass off center. You can up a windlass so the chain just dumps out on deck. As long as you are up on the foredeck to clear the chain away from the windlass that might work. Manually feed the chain into the existing pukas or pile it on deck to be fed below at your convenience.As long as you have the depth in the chain locker for the chain to pile up without jamming at the deck, it's way easier to let the chain self store from the windlass. Makes solo anchor retrieval from the helm easy peasy when single handing among the benefits. I highly recommend a vertical windlass with rope capstan and chain gypsy. Makes warping into Med. moorings or kedging off when the bottom sneaks up on you.It would be a bit complicated and labor intensive but you could use the sheet winches with a line tied to the anchor chain using a rolling hitch to haul in the last or any part of the rode
mfra...@gmail.com wrote:
....
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I like the creativity. I would say there are already several components on the boat that could be put to the same purpose with some auxilliary line (could probably be 5/16 staset) - primary genoa winches, mast winches, cabin top winches. Probably handiest for it to be self tailing.
But best to pull on the actual rode rather than having to rig some auxiliary line and then have to manage two?
The real issue is handling the chain. Otherwise you could fit a standard winch on the foredeck. The typical vertical windlass gypsies handle line and chain.
The barriers of cost and pride may be the real limiting factors here.
Dan Pfeiffer
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Bob, your description of using a cockpit winch to handle a "pulling rope" makes me wonder if you realize what that KISS acronym stands for. Pulling the anchor line directly will be much simper than rigging some second line and running around managing both. And you will have a potentially messy anchor rode running all the way along the side deck. You could use a halyard to lift the rode too. A good 55 feet of scope there and have all that lovely goop dripping from above.
KISS would be putting a proper windlass (manual or electric) that can handle the line and chain on the bow. Simplest in operation would be the electric with it's advantages that Peter O described nicely. A bit more effort/complexity to install but that's the price for the simpler operation? If I did a lot of anchoring that's what I would do. I am waiting for the 48V units to come along.
I would rather see fiberglass board ( of the type McMaster Carr sells) glued and tabbed in place with epoxy than any HDPE backing plate for such a load bearing job as backing a windlass and/or the bow cleats. HDPE is great stuff for many things but not for this. It's just not firm enough. Amazing abrasion resistance though.
I removed the OEM bow chocks and moved the bow cleats to the tow rail thus eliminating a potential point of chafe. The bow cleats mount with 1/2" studs that bolt through the backing plate I added for my jib boom mount. Details here:
http://dan.pfeiffer.net/10m/hoyt_jib_boom_install_details.htm
Dan Pfeiffer
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Oops - thought that was off list reply. Sorry for the clutter. Enjoy the pics.
Dan Pfeiffer
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Seems to me there are two solutions to your anchor recovery problem. One is a windlass and the other is not a windlass. You have already spent some amount of time pondering the latter. Add to that the time over just one season that a windlass would save you over the other solutions. Work at MacDonald's for that amount of time and you will make enough money to buy and pay for the installation of a windlass. There may also come a time when you need to recover the anchor in less than ideal conditions. I suggest that is no time to be fussing with pull lines, block and tackles, chain grabs, or rolling hitches on a pitching foredeck.
Dan Pfeiffer
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Seems to me there are two solutions to your anchor recovery problem. One is a windlass and the other is not a windlass. You have already spent some amount of time pondering the latter. Add to that the time over just one season that a windlass would save
you over the other solutions. Work at MacDonald's for that amount of time and you will make enough money to buy and pay for the installation of a windlass. There may also come a time when you need to recover the anchor in less than ideal conditions. I suggest
that is no time to be fussing with pull lines, block and tackles, chain grabs, or rolling hitches on a pitching foredeck.
Dan Pfeiffer
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At the end of the season - I pick Bob for my tug-of-war competition team
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My Anchorman manual windlass has a 3" diameter drum or 1.5" radius. There is no gearing, just a ratchet. Very simple. So with a 10" handle the power is 10/1.5 (that's the handle length divided by radius of the drum). So that's a 6.6:1 power ratio. So you would put in 1 lb on the handle for every 6.6 lbs on the load. So about 8 lbs of force on the handle to haul your 50lb load. An electric windlass would only require the force to push a button.
Your 4:1 tackle will make it 1/4 as much to pull, plus a bit for friction as you surmised. So about 13 lbs of pull to pull your 50 lb load. Keep in mind that to reach from your mast to the bow is about 15 feet on a P36 and you will need 4x that amount of line in the tackle for a total of 60 feet. And all that will be piled up on the foredeck with your ground tackle for every pull you make. So you'll need to manage all that in addition to the ground tackle as you run your rube-Goldberg-ish recovery system. And I would think you want a line that handles nicely so at least 3/8"? But the load is relatively small compared to something like a mainsheet so 5/16 would probably be fine. But 60 feet either way.
I think your making more work for yourself with all this. Is it really practical? The windlass would dump the ground tackle straight into the locker. The tackle will drop it on deck where you will manually feed it into the locker. And you will be pulling potentially messy/mucky chain from the roller all the way across the deck to the mast. Just the thought of the convenience of being able to hose off the ground tackle with a deck wash hose as it's retrieved seems a pretty valuable plus for a windlass.
Dan Pfeiffer
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Good luck finding Anchorman. As I have mentioned several times the Anchorman manual windlass is no longer in production. Mine may have been almost the last 10 years ago? If you find one buy it. Thats a Simpson Lawrence anchorman manual windlass. The pop up every now and then on Cruisers Forum and such. Not often.
There are a couple solutions to the problem of water getting in. A hawes pipe cover is what is typically found. Examples:
https://www.google.com/search?q=hawse+pipe+cover&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiPiO6f4LL0AhXnjYkEHV8-D9AQ_AUoAXoECAEQAw&biw=1920&bih=955&dpr=1
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The overhead work in the forepeak was a challenge but not so bad after I made a platform so I could slide in to the space on my back. It was a bit of a puzzle figuring out to get my shoulders and arms through the opening but it was relatively comfortable working on the platform.
I'll comment on 10M vs P36 in another thread.
Dan Pfeiffer
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Dan thanks again for the picture of this platform I think I will need to build one in the spring . I am needing to repair the bow pulpit on my Pearson 10 M . have you tackled that project yet ?
I need repair the aftermost foot section on the port side , it has come loose and to be rebuilt .
Do you have any thoughts on rebuilding the bow pulpit uprights ?
From: pearso...@googlegroups.com <pearso...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Dan Pfeiffer
Sent: Sunday, November 28, 2021 1:20 PM
To: pearso...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [pearson ] 10 M Windlass?
The overhead work in the forepeak was a challenge but not so bad after I made a platform so I could slide in to the space on my back. It was a bit of a puzzle figuring out to get my shoulders
and arms through the opening but it was relatively comfortable working on the platform.
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Thanks. A couple note on the patform. At the front it us cut to fit the vee of the bow and has a notch cut out for the center rib. I shove it all the way forward so it's supported at the front. The top is sanded very smooth so I can slide on it. And at the aft end I put a big radius on the 2x parts after struggling to keep from scraping my back on the corners when getting out.
Don't quite understand what your issue is with the pulpit base. Got a photo? If you're talking about an issue with the deck that is balsa cored where the pulpit mounts and needs to be de-cored and epoxy filled for best strength and water resistance. The balsa tapers at the outboard edge. You can see that at the right edge of this photo cross-section right ahead of the fwd stanchion base.
For the SS part of the pulpit that would likely need some welding if it has come apart.
Dan Pfeiffer
Thanks. A couple notes on the platform. At the front it is cut to fit the vee of the bow and has a notch cut out for the center rib. I shove it all the way forward so it's supported at the front. The top is sanded very smooth so I can slide on it. And at the aft end I put a big radius on the 2x parts after struggling to keep from scraping my back on the corners when getting out.
Don't quite understand what your issue is with the pulpit base. Got a photo? If you're talking about an issue with the deck that is balsa cored where the pulpit mounts and needs to be de-cored and epoxy filled for best strength and water resistance. The balsa tapers at the outboard edge. You can see that at the right edge of this photo cross-section right ahead of the fwd stanchion base.
For the SS part of the pulpit that would likely need some welding if it has come apart.
Dan Pfeiffer
On 2021-11-28 3:08 pm, Charles Bachmann wrote:
Ye it’s the deck section , I did not receive the picture .
From: pearso...@googlegroups.com <pearso...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Dan Pfeiffer
Sent: Sunday, November 28, 2021 3:27 PM
To: pearso...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [pearson ] 10 M Windlass?
Thanks. A couple notes on the platform. At the front it is cut to fit the vee of the bow and has a notch cut out for the center rib. I shove it all the way forward so it's supported at the
front. The top is sanded very smooth so I can slide on it. And at the aft end I put a big radius on the 2x parts after struggling to keep from scraping my back on the corners when getting out.
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On Nov 28, 2021, at 2:45 PM, Charles Bachmann <Cbach...@outlook.com> wrote:
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Thanks , just wondering what holds it together , just that small bead of 5200 ? Also , I need to replace about 6 feet of rub rail around the Bow of my 10 M
Is it available for sale ?
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The 10M deck is set on the hull with 5200 adhesive between the flanges, then screwed together along the flange, then the joint is tabbed over on the inside. The quality of this tabbing varies depending mostly on how hard it was to access. The tabbing is all secondary done after both the deck and hull layups.
The rub rail used to be available from Taco Marine. There are two parts. The is a white plastic strip that may be held in place with screws along the flange? And then a vinyl part that goes over that. I think this is the same shape but in black:
https://tacomarine.com/rub-rail-flexible-vinyl-v11-3161
I do not know if is still available in white. Ask Taco. It used to be. If they say no ask them if you got together a half dozen orders would they make some? I wouldn't mind replacing mine. There may be others also interested? The rub rail on the 10M would be about 75 feet?
Installing this is reported to be a pretty tough job that should be done on a good hot day and may involve warming up the rub rail in a vat of hot water and probably careful use of a heat gun. Start at the bow in the middle of the rub rail and work aft on both sides.
Replacing a section would need a couple splices of some sort. Or covering over the resulting but joint.
Dan Pfeiffer
On 2021-11-28 5:38 pm, Charles Bachmann wrote:
Thanks , just wondering what holds it together , just that small bead of 5200 ? Also , I need to replace about 6 feet of rub rail around the Bow of my 10 M
Is it available for sale ?
From: pearso...@googlegroups.com <pearso...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Dan Pfeiffer
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Subject: Re: [pearson ] 10 M Windlass?
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The track suit is a stylish choice. Being able to work comfortably is really important to the quality. I tried stuffing cushions and I wasn't able to get to all I needed comfortably and I didn't want to drip epoxy and spread sanding dust on that sort of stuff. Plus I need room to pass through the tools and other things while working. For the major glass work I had a helper doing wet-out of the glass strips , rolling them up and passing them to me. The work I did alone required more in-out.
Also I had a fan blowing air into the forepeak from one of the access ports in the deck.
Dan Pfeiffer

On 2021-11-26 10:13 pm, Robert Franklin wrote:
Dan,
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Your rather small halyard winch is 8:1. Your pulley rig was 2:1? So the winch will have 4x the pulling force or take 1/4 the effort. Or if it is the 4:1 mainsheet tackle the winch will have 2x the power. And with the 4:1 tackle you'll have 70 feet of line to deal with. Bigger plus to the winch might be that there is less line to deal with as there is no line purchase involved. Could be just 20 feet of line. Another advantage with the winch is you can hand-over-hand the line on the winch at 1:1 until it gets heavy then switch to the winch handle when needed (just like you do raising a sail). And it is easy to cleat off. You could also go forward with the tail of the pull line if need be to clear a foul or set a chain stopper (might need 30 feet of line to do that). Seems better all around. It makes sense to me to use the main halyard winch. That would be free any time I had an anchor down. The jib halyard winch is always occupied with the roller furling sail halyard.
You need a chain stopper - works like a ratchet letting you pull the chain in but not letting it go back out when you release the line.
https://www.defender.com/product3.jsp?path=-1|2276108|2276124|2226887|2276131|2276136&id=934473
PROCESS USING MAST WINCH
Pull up anchor rope until end of chain is in chain stopper (you could probably use the mast winch on the anchor rope?),
stow the anchor rope down the hawspipe except the last 14 feet
(because it has to go back to the mast with the end of the chain),
connect pull line with chain hook to the anchor chain on the up side of the chain stopper,
pull that over the winch (using handle as needed) for the 14 feet until the chain is at the winch,
stow that 14 feet of anchor rope down the hawspipe (chain stopper will hold chain),
re-set line with chain hook to the chain just up from the stopper,
pull that over the winch (using handle as needed) for the 14 feet,
stow the first 14 feet of chain down the hawspipe,
repeat until all the chain is onboard.
The length of pull will actually be a bit shorter depending on how far aft of the stem the chain stopper has to be located.
The winch works a lot like a proper windlass would with the added fuss of the pull line and line hook and having to re-set on the chain every 14 feet (distance to mast) because you can't run the chain over the winch like you can with a proper windlass. Still more effort than a windlass and more things to go wrong and likely to make a mess on the deck all the way to the mast. But better and a lot faster I think than a block and tackle mess which will be especially fussy when you're letting it back out for the next pull. I would hate to be motoring along out of a crowded anchorage with an anchor hanging down 15 or 20 feet in the water while I was fussing on deck with 60 feet of tangled line.
I think your general rule of simplicity should have lead you to a windlass a long time ago. It may not be the simplest to install (though it's not hard) but it is by far the simplest solution to your problem in operation which is what really matters I think.
I think a windlass on a 31 foot boat is a fine idea. It may be a bit more of a challenge to install on a P31-2 with the anchor locker but with that problem solved it would be a very handy bit of gear if you do a lot of anchoring. In the mean time the 31-2 crew might look into a Fortress aluminum anchor? Much lighter and easier to handle.
Here's an ebay listing for a manual windlass like the Anchorman. A bit pricey at at $860. I would offer $650 or so?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/294739887955?hash=item449fddc753:g:lxUAAOSwfSFh5kB-
There's lots of sand on Great Lakes bottoms but the places you really want to go are rocky.
Dan Pfeiffer
Your rather small halyard winch is 8:1. Your pulley rig was 2:1? So the winch will have 4x the pulling force or take 1/4 the effort. Or if it is the 4:1 mainsheet tackle the winch will have 2x the power. And with the 4:1 tackle you'll have 70 feet of line to deal with. Bigger plus to the winch might be that there is less line to deal with as there is no line purchase involved. Could be just 20 feet of line. Another advantage with the winch is you can hand-over-hand the line on the winch at 1:1 until it gets heavy then switch to the winch handle when needed (just like you do raising a sail). And it is easy to cleat off. You could also go forward with the tail of the pull line if need be to clear a foul or set a chain stopper (might need 30 feet of line to do that). Seems better all around. It makes sense to me to use the main halyard winch. That would be free any time I had an anchor down. The jib halyard winch is always occupied with the roller furling sail halyard.
You need a chain stopper - works like a ratchet letting you pull the chain in but not letting it go back out when you release the line.
https://www.defender.com/product3.jsp?path=-1|2276108|2276124|2226887|2276131|2276136&id=934473
PROCESS USING MAST WINCH
Pull up anchor rope until end of chain is in chain stopper (you could probably use the mast winch on the anchor rope?),
stow the anchor rope down the hawspipe except the last 14 feet
(because it has to go back to the mast with the end of the chain),
connect pull line with chain hook to the anchor chain on the up side of the chain stopper,
pull that over the winch (using handle as needed) for the 14 feet until the chain is at the winch,
stow that 14 feet of anchor rope down the hawspipe (chain stopper will hold chain),
re-set line with chain hook to the chain just up from the stopper,
pull that over the winch (using handle as needed) for the 14 feet,
stow the first 14 feet of chain down the hawspipe,
repeat until all the chain is onboard.
The length of pull will actually be a bit shorter depending on how far aft of the stem the chain stopper has to be located.
The winch works a lot like a proper windlass would with the added fuss of the pull line and line hook and having to re-set on the chain every 14 feet (distance to mast) because you can't run the chain over the winch like you can with a proper windlass. Still more effort than a windlass and more things to go wrong and likely to make a mess on the deck all the way to the mast. But better and a lot faster I think than a block and tackle mess which will be especially fussy when you're letting it back out for the next pull. I would hate to be motoring along out of a crowded anchorage with an anchor hanging down 15 or 20 feet in the water while I was fussing on deck with 60 feet of tangled line.
I think your general rule of simplicity should have lead you to a windlass a long time ago. It may not be the simplest to install (though it's not hard) but it is by far the simplest solution to your problem in operation which is what really matters I think.
I think a windlass on a 31 foot boat is a fine idea. It may be a bit more of a challenge to install on a P31-2 with the anchor locker but with that problem solved it would be a very handy bit of gear if you do a lot of anchoring. In the mean time the 31-2 crew might look into a Fortress aluminum anchor? Much lighter and easier to handle.
Here's an ebay listing for a manual windlass like the Anchorman. A bit pricey at at $860. I would offer $650 or so?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/294739887955?hash=item449fddc753:g:lxUAAOSwfSFh5kB-
There's lots of sand on Great Lakes bottoms but the places you really want to go are rocky.
Dan Pfeiffer
On 2022-02-27 10:25 pm, Robert Franklin wrote:
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Good deal on a windlass?
https://www.defender.com/product3.jsp?path=-1|2276108|2276145|2276147&id=3264983#
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¼ inch G4 or BBB chain up to ½ in line
From: pearso...@googlegroups.com <pearso...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Dave Cole
Sent: Wednesday, March 2, 2022 11:13 AM
To: pearso...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [pearson ] 10 M Windlass?
Whoa...... that's one of those newfangled electric ones.... ;-)
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