


I discovered thousands of apps that can be used to make boating safer and more enjoyable, including for navigation, weather forecasting, fishing and diving, convenience, and, of course, safety. So I spent some time researching and testing out some boating apps, which I used as soon as boating season fired up again. We thus have virtually no experience of phone based anchor alarms.Shorebound during COVID-19 quarantine, I realized that being confined to land didn't mean I couldn't satisfy my love of being on the water. We also have a berth mounted compass and when a front is expected we can see the orientation of the yacht, has or has not, changed, is changing, and that the front is arriving.

It might be complacency but we are sufficiently confident with out anchors and use of same that we only set an alarm, with the chart plotter whose aerial is 'outside', in exceptional circumstances (and it has a piezo electric alarm added), when we expect the arrival of a major front or we are anchored somewhere with strong tide reversals (not common where we cruise). However we have not dragged either - so maybe my caution is misplaced. I treat the comments with some caution as their does appear to reluctance to admit that ones spanking new (and expensive) modern anchor is not all it is cracked up to be. It may turn out to be 'operator' error, an error in the App or something specific to iPhone It may also be something to check anyway.Ī few years ago I solicited comments on the frequency with which modern anchor dragged and apart from catching supermarket trolleys and the like no-one admitted that their modern anchor had dragged. For those of you who rely on anchor alarms, specifically phone anchor alarms, there might be an interesting thread on Cruisers Forum that you might want to followĪnchor alarm app stopped working on iPhone - Cruisers & Sailing Forums
