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    #31
    Holy cow, $900? How does the XYZ compare against six box anchors?

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      #32
      Originally posted by shawndoggy View Post
      Holy cow, $900? How does the XYZ compare against six box anchors?
      I paid 1/2 that price for the #7 anchor. This anchor will hold our boat under the most severe weather. So... if you don't plan to get caught in high winds (like near the gulf of mexico), then it's over kill. But if you have a boat load of children and you do get caught in severe weather, you'll kiss that XYZ anchor when the storms over. That's all. You get what you pay for and a box anchor fits the needs of 95% of the ski boat owners out there. The XYZ anchor was used in our Cobalt 250 which went off shore. I miss that boat but we love our Tige more.

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        #33
        what's the best way to hook a rope to a box anchor?

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          #34
          Originally posted by sincity View Post
          i guess i will have to disagree with most everybody, while i have owned a box anchor for over 15 years, and still use it today, it is not the pefect anchor, it works fine 80% of the time,but every year we go to lake powell, and every year we will get a storm with 60 mile an hour winds and the box anchor will break loose, it will reset itself and then break loose again and again, several of us end up standing in the water holding boats so the dont bang into each other, it turns into a party actually. i will be doing some other kind of anchoring system this year for powell other than the box anchor. might take a look at the xyz anchor.
          sin city
          Sin City,

          Forgive my ignorance because I've never tried to anchor in 60 mph wind....

          I'm assuming when wind is blowing at 60mph that you are getting off the water? If so, if you use an anchor buddy to the box anchor and have a rope to a stake on shore, won't you be keeping the box anchor permanently set, because the anchor buddy will always be putting tension on the anchor? Or in your experience will it still "walk" even with some tension?



          Again, like I said, I'm completely ignorant of anchoring in 60mph winds (and that's one of the things that freaks me out about doing a powell trip).

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            #35
            Originally posted by sincity View Post
            i guess i will have to disagree with most everybody, while i have owned a box anchor for over 15 years, and still use it today, it is not the pefect anchor, it works fine 80% of the time,but every year we go to lake powell, and every year we will get a storm with 60 mile an hour winds and the box anchor will break loose, it will reset itself and then break loose again and again, several of us end up standing in the water holding boats so the dont bang into each other, it turns into a party actually. i will be doing some other kind of anchoring system this year for powell other than the box anchor. might take a look at the xyz anchor.
            sin city
            You expect us to believe you and several of your friends can hold a 4000lb boat in at least 2 foot of water in 60 mph winds? I was born at night,but it wasn't last night.
            I do all my own stunt work. hey ya'll watch dis.

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              #36
              Sincity, I just want to know when your week @ LP is and what canyon you go to, so I can avoid those annual winds?
              Mike Allen, Tigé owner since 1997

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                #37
                Shawndoggy, normally I would be getting off the water but since we are there for a week you just dont tuck tail and head for the marina. Robert thieson, yes last year there were 43 people on our trip and yes it is very easy for 6 to 10 people to hold a 24 foot tige in high winds, if it gets too strong, we will unhook and drive around until it's over which is usually around twenty minutes or so. The houseboat across the cove last year had a wind speed meter on the top, which clocked winds at 62mph, we camp around gunsight canyon, you don't always get the best spot to camp, some places are protected and some are not, last year we got one that wasn't, it sucked , there were two nights last year that really big thunderstorms rolled through. Normally a box anchor does the job, but it sure didn't like the 60mph, our house boat had no problem though, we dig four foot deep holes and burry the anchors, how ever the cove next to us, there was a 65 foot house almost completely out of the water tipped on its side, the marina had to send out the big diesel barge to pull it off. Team Allen , the whole month of August, on lake Powell, thunderstorms are a definitely possibility,
                Sin city
                Our trip is August 19th through the 25th every year for the last 12 years.
                Shawndoggy, I have never used an anchor buddy, but one of my friends tha has a 23 foot Sea ray, was there and he had one, it was anchored with the proper size box anchor, the anchor buddy and 150 feet of rope, his boat broke loose also. The box anchors are probably only good for 35 knots, in my experience at lake Powell, as you say day trips to lake mead, we don't even leave the house if the weather report says anything more than 15 mph.
                Last edited by sincity; 05-17-2012, 01:41 PM.
                2005 24v

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                  #38
                  Originally posted by sincity View Post
                  Shawndoggy, normally I would be getting off the water but since we are there for a week you just dont tuck tail and head for the marina. Robert thieson, yes last year there were 43 people on our trip and yes it is very easy for 6 to 10 people to hold a 24 foot tige in high winds, if it gets too strong, we will unhook and drive around until it's over which is usually around twenty minutes or so. The houseboat across the cove last year had a wind speed meter on the top, which clocked winds at 62mph, we camp around gunsight canyon, you don't always get the best spot to camp, some places are protected and some are not, last year we got one that wasn't, it sucked , there were two nights last year that really big thunderstorms rolled through. Normally a box anchor does the job, but it sure didn't like the 60mph, our house boat had no problem though, we dig four foot deep holes and burry the anchors, how ever the cove next to us, there was a 65 foot house almost completely out of the water tipped on its side, the marina had to send out the big diesel barge to pull it off. Team Allen , the whole month of August, on lake Powell, thunderstorms are a definitely possibility,
                  Sin city
                  Our trip is August 19th through the 25th every year for the last 12 years.
                  A picture or video of the wind speed gauge would help.

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                    #39
                    Hold your breath, I will get right on that. Best I can do is a link to the 2009 storm,
                    http://www.deseretnews.com/article/7...ke-Powell.html

                    Sin city
                    Last edited by sincity; 05-17-2012, 02:20 PM.
                    2005 24v

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                      #40
                      Originally posted by sincity View Post
                      Hold your breath, I will get right on that. Best I can do is a link to the 2009 storm,
                      http://www.deseretnews.com/article/7...ke-Powell.html

                      Sin city
                      I was just being a smartazz, just kidding around.

                      Sorry.

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                        #41
                        someone shared this on malibucrew yesterday as the definitive way to anchor at powell....


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                          #42
                          This is too complicated IMO.

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                            #43
                            Thanks for the update on your spot and date. I have always gone much further up the lake and we have the last week in July. No winds like that during our week so far.
                            Mike Allen, Tigé owner since 1997

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                              #44
                              Originally posted by Nobody View Post
                              This is too complicated IMO.
                              Probably less complicated than salvaging your sunk boat from Lake Powell.

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                                #45
                                http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j...R9tVPhZY7ArsJg


                                Check out this link from the storm of 2009' we were there the day this storm hit, we saw this house boat right after it happened, lake powell can be dangerous if your not prepared. shawdoggy that looks pretty interesting, we didnt tie up like that but to save my friend with the sea ray last year we pulled the spare danforth of of the house boat which ways probably 50 or 60 pounds and that saved the day.
                                Sin city
                                Last edited by sincity; 05-17-2012, 10:20 PM.
                                2005 24v

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