| Re: A class Worlds: mainsail designs
[Re: Catfan]
#123753 11/15/07 06:40 AM 11/15/07 06:40 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | I believe that Randy Smyth deserves the award for the most radical design (boomless, upwards inclined head, 6 battens)
WOW ! take a look at all that RADICAL A-cat development. A boomless mainsail with only 6 battens ! Who else would have thought of that ! Wouter
Last edited by Wouter; 11/15/07 06:43 AM.
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: A class Worlds: mainsail designs
[Re: Wouter]
#123754 11/15/07 07:34 AM 11/15/07 07:34 AM |
Joined: Jan 2006 Posts: 48 Zurich Daniel_Gut
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Posts: 48 Zurich | Why don't you borrow an A Cat and go and sail it at a regatta, you will almost certainly end up with a bunch of people who enjoy the same sport you do, get to sail a fabulous boat and hopefully go home realising that it does not really matter which cat class you sail in, its all good fun and its your choice. I am guessing you built your own F16 so that you could "improve" a few things on it. All new cars still have 4 wheels and an engine, but they are getting better. Be nice!
Last edited by DanielG; 11/15/07 08:22 AM.
| | | Re: A class Worlds: mainsail designs
[Re: bvining]
#123756 11/15/07 10:56 AM 11/15/07 10:56 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD Mark Schneider
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Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD | Interesting.
Randy started that idea years ago with P19MX mainsail..
He used a thick wooden batten to get the sail to stand up over the mast....
Affectionately named... "da woody"... It seemed to go OK, very senstive to main sheet tension but the class died shortly afterwards.
crac.sailregattas.com
| | | Re: A class Worlds: mainsail designs
[Re: Daniel_Gut]
#123757 11/15/07 10:58 AM 11/15/07 10:58 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | Daniel,
The point here is not about the A-cat or the class directly, but about how some people write up trivial or even old modifications as radical developments.
Lets face it, developping a full foiling moth was radical, developping a sold wingsail rig in the C-class was radical, but removing a single batten from the bottom of the sail and removing the boom is not radical by any stretch of the imagination. It is already a stretch to call it development as many other designs have already gone down that route before.
Sorry, just the way I see it.
Wouter
Last edited by Wouter; 11/15/07 10:59 AM.
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: A class Worlds: mainsail designs
[Re: Wouter]
#123758 11/15/07 11:55 AM 11/15/07 11:55 AM |
Joined: Sep 2006 Posts: 613 New Hampshire, USA windswept
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Posts: 613 New Hampshire, USA | You are correct, the main is not radical and Richard Roake came back and corrected that point one 2 or 3 of these threads a few weeks ago, so drop it, it is already dead and beaten over the head a long time ago. As to the wing, for what it is, it does fall under the radical design aspect of this conversation. It is a take off of what the C-Class has featured for years, but it also is a wing designed for how an A handles and sails. The simple fact that you have enough drive to do this and take it to the worlds as your first major regatta is a big and some would say radical step.
Tom Siders A-Cat USA-79 Tornado US775
| | | Re: A class Worlds: mainsail designs
[Re: RetiredGeek]
#123763 11/15/07 12:36 PM 11/15/07 12:36 PM | Anonymous
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Unregistered | Appreciate you giving us the inside scoop RG. | | | Re: A class Worlds: mainsail designs
[Re: RetiredGeek]
#123769 11/16/07 01:02 PM 11/16/07 01:02 PM |
Joined: Nov 2003 Posts: 130 CA Glenn_Brown
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Posts: 130 CA | Regarding the tip vortex: Is there anything in the A cat rules that would prohibit a winglet to address that tip vortex? The A rules are open enough to allow hard sails, and winglets are a proven win on airfoils...
The winglet could be hard (like a wing sail) or soft (like a kite) or pressure-inflated (like a baloon) or wind inflated (like a parasail). If wind-inflated, it might be possible to design one that blows full on the windward side and flattens itself to leeward.
If the winglets were hard (e.g.: Carbon) and pivotted around a batten, and settled to a '^' position at rest by gravity, then the wind underway would lift the windward winglet into position and press the leeward against the sail. It would even work in light air if the rotational axis was near the center of gravity of the part that rotates. If fitted to a hard sail, the leeward foil might fit in a rebate on the leeward side for cleaner airflow.
*That* would be radical. Not sure it's legal or worth the weight aloft, though.
Another possibility is a simple end plate atop the mast or as the top part of the sail. End plates are another proven win for constrained airfoils. If you extend the '^' flopper concept to an end plate, the plate could have camber on each side to match the target sail camber, so that when it flopped from side to side the leeward plate would be flush with the sail cloth, and the windward side would have useful camber to help it do its job. Care would be required to pick the right angle of attack and profile for such a cambered end plate, but it could be used to form a featherweight simple auto-tacking winglet.
</brainstorm>, --Glenn | | | Re: A class Worlds: mainsail designs
[Re: Glenn_Brown]
#123770 11/16/07 02:56 PM 11/16/07 02:56 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | A friend (schooled in avionics) and a former crew mate ones asked me :"What is the difference between a winglet and a zero angle of attack wingtip"
The question was retorical and I understood what he meant.
Basically wingtip can also be had by adding a zero angle of attack wingtip on top and in line of the active wing section. On cats we approximate this by letting the tops twist off.
This is also to most simple method of descreasing wing top vortex on A-cats as they don't have a mast length limit.
Wouter
Last edited by Wouter; 11/16/07 02:57 PM.
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
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