Hinz included in his book on anchoring the story of a sailor who brought his boat through a hurricane while at anchor. The take home message was that chafe was the big problem. His first anchor rode chafed through despite all his attempts to protect it, the second he managed to protect well enough, through rather heroic efforts. Over half the boats in the anchorage grounded, and when he dove to recover the anchors he found them well dug in, with the rodes chafed through.
Earlier in the book Hinz recommends that if you leave your boat for a while and you have a chain and rope rode, you should put a short chain around your Samson post, lead it over the bow roller, shackle some rope to that, and attach that to the rope portion of the anchor rode with a rolling hitch. The chain goes over the roller, it doesn't stretch significantly, so there is no significant chafe there.
So, first I wonder whether that would also be recommended for a hurricane, eliminating the need for heroic foredeck work to replace chafe protection and let out a bit more rode. Or would the rolling hitch weaken the connection too much? I read the rule of thumb is that knots weaken a rope by about 50%.
Second, if I use an anchor reel like the one that Brent Swain designed (
http://www.freewebs.com/origamiboats/apps/photos/photo?photoid=15971947), would it make sense to insert about 2 metres of chain into the rope at distances of about about 15 metres? That chain could go into a chain stopper behind the bow roller. It should not chafe. The chain inserts would be connected to the rope by splices, just like the initial chain leader. So that connection should not weaken the rode overall. Using Brent Swain's anchor reel, I wouldn't need to worry about the transition between rope and chain, the way I would have to with a conventional windlass. The only downside I see is that I wouldn't have fine adjustments to rode length, I would have to adjust in increments equal to the distance between chain inserts.
Is there anything I have overlooked? Would this be a rode that would allow me to forget about chafe?
If I correctly understood what Brent Swain wrote in "Origami Boatbuilding", he uses lengths of wire rode, and a snubber attached to whichever eye splice gives him a suitable scope. So he seems to increase rode length in discrete increments.