| Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: Tornado_ALIVE]
#138046 03/29/08 03:51 AM 03/29/08 03:51 AM |
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Posts: 571 Hamburg | There is a very good statistical analysis on the web: http://www.geocities.com/f16hpclass/F16HP_optimal_crew_weight_analysis.htmlI recommend to completly read it, because the author actually made two analyses. One simple normalised time to finish over weight (light boats are better even in strong winds). In a second attempt he realised, that the good sailors have in general lighter boats. He compared than the relative performance of each boat in different wind conditions and found that light crews/boats perform better in light wind and heavy crews/boats better in strong winds. Another proof is, that top sailors are in general not lighter than average and that female crews (which are lighter in average) are not the faster sailor in average. If you can't use the benefit of a heavy crew in strong wind, than maybe because you don't have the right heavy weight trim for your boat. Cheers, Klaus | | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: Tornado_ALIVE]
#138047 03/29/08 04:30 AM 03/29/08 04:30 AM |
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Posts: 571 Hamburg | If weight was not an issue, then why do (most) manufactures strive to reach min weight ...
Are they wrong, wasting their time or do they know something some others don't. Basic marketing: If you want to sell a boat, you have to satisfy the wishes of the customers. There are also golf clubs out of CFRP and titanium and cars with four wheel drive which will never be driven outside of big cities, and so on. What counts is that they sell. Every kilogram of resin, fibres or whatever is your boat from costs the builder something. Hence there is no interest in building heavy boats. BTW: manufacture costs and selling price are not the same. Of course if somebody is convinced by the weight issue, his mind will be blocked until he get rid of the last gramm. As a marketing guy I would put even more fuel in this fire and offer extra sets of CFRP rudders and boards, dyneema sheets and so on. Don't understand me wrong, I am very happy, that there are lightweight boats, because you can handle them so easy on the beach. But I concentrate on sailing and not on material. Cheers, Klaus | | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: Smiths_Cat]
#138048 03/29/08 06:52 AM 03/29/08 06:52 AM |
Joined: Jul 2002 Posts: 206 Yardley PA DanWard
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Posts: 206 Yardley PA | A heavier boat may in some conditions generate a higher righting moment however it is the ratio of righting moment to weight that drives performance. If Klaus is right I should be adding weight to my boat on heavy air days. I've never seen anyone do that.
Last edited by DanWard; 03/29/08 06:52 AM.
| | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: tshan]
#138051 03/29/08 08:13 AM 03/29/08 08:13 AM |
Joined: Apr 2003 Posts: 1,669 Melbourne, Australia Tornado_ALIVE
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Posts: 1,669 Melbourne, Australia | I have raced my F18 carrying an extra 18kg of crew weight onboard and watched this happen many times. Then when I am sailing at min weight, the disadvantage is gone and you are doing likewise to the heavier boats. Just for arguments sake.... The quote above references 2 crew weights, which (to me) may mean two dfferent crew members. Could the performance difference you experience be related to having different crew onboard? Certainly crew work would reflect on your ability to get around the course/manuever/etc. Just asking, as your assertation seems to be fairly general and COULD be misleading to the exact cause of the decreased performance. No disrespect to the crews involved, of course. This has been experienced over many different crews, all very good sailors. With my crew I sailed with for 7 years, we steped onto the Capricorn at 186 kg, and by the time the AUS Worlds came about, we were 164kg. We could feel the difference in the boat as we became lighter. Just after the Worlds, I had several different crews jump on ranging from 85kg to 65kg. VMG was better as the crews got lighter. | | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: DanWard]
#138052 03/29/08 08:15 AM 03/29/08 08:15 AM |
Joined: Aug 2001 Posts: 1,307 Asuncion, Paraguay Luiz
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Posts: 1,307 Asuncion, Paraguay | If Klaus is right I should be adding weight to my boat on heavy air days. I've never seen anyone do that. Exactly. It is quite obvious that the weight should be added to the crew and not the hull. Also, bigger boats should increase the water ballast in the back of the windward hull.
Luiz
| | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: Tornado_ALIVE]
#138053 03/30/08 08:37 AM 03/30/08 08:37 AM |
Joined: Dec 2005 Posts: 1,121 Eastern NC, USA tshan
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Posts: 1,121 Eastern NC, USA | Thanks for the reply, it certaily makes sense to me. 18 kgs seems significant.
One more question.... let's use 10 kgs wieght difference in this example. What order would you place the following (from most important to least important - obvioulsy all would help)?
1. New set of sails 2. Completely faired hulls, rudders, boards 3. Get boat/crew to minimum weights (10kgs) 4. Extra 5 hours practice each month
What else should be added to the list?
Thanks for the input.
Tom | | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: DanWard]
#138055 03/30/08 09:56 AM 03/30/08 09:56 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | If Klaus is right I should be adding weight to my boat on heavy air days. I've never seen anyone do that
Actually we do this on landyachts and several larger racing Cats and Tris have waterballast in this way. It is being done; you were just never around to see it. <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" /> Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: ]
#138056 03/30/08 10:59 AM 03/30/08 10:59 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 953 Western Australia Stewart
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Posts: 953 Western Australia | "the only place where weight improves performance is in a steam roller" ... Uffa Fox <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" />
Last edited by Stewart; 03/30/08 11:19 AM.
| | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: Wouter]
#138057 03/30/08 11:06 AM 03/30/08 11:06 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,906 Clermont, FL, USA David Ingram
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Posts: 3,906 Clermont, FL, USA | water ballast is very different from static weight.
David Ingram F18 USA 242 http://www.solarwind.solar"Do or do not. There is no try." - Yoda "Excuses are the tools of the weak and incompetent" - Two sista's I overheard in the hall "You don't have to be a brain surgeon to be a complete idiot, but it helps"
| | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: tshan]
#138058 03/31/08 03:22 AM 03/31/08 03:22 AM |
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Posts: 571 Hamburg | One more question.... let's use 10 kgs wieght difference in this example. What order would you place the following (from most important to least important - obvioulsy all would help)?
1. New set of sails 2. Completely faired hulls, rudders, boards 3. Get boat/crew to minimum weights (10kgs) 4. Extra 5 hours practice each month
What else should be added to the list? 5. get the sail and rig trimmed 6. having a positive attitude and I would split 2) in 2a. faired rudders, boards 2b. faired hulls *) My ranking is: 6 4 5 nothing 1 nothing nothing 2a nothing 2b *) long bodies are less sensitive to roughness than short bodies (i.e. rudders and boards) due to Reynolds number effects. Cheers, Klaus | | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: tshan]
#138059 03/31/08 04:41 AM 03/31/08 04:41 AM |
Joined: Apr 2003 Posts: 1,669 Melbourne, Australia Tornado_ALIVE
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Posts: 1,669 Melbourne, Australia | 1. New set of sails 2. Completely faired hulls, rudders, boards 3. Get boat/crew to minimum weights (10kgs) 4. Extra 5 hours practice each month
4 1 3 2 | | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: Wouter]
#138060 03/31/08 05:03 AM 03/31/08 05:03 AM |
Joined: Apr 2003 Posts: 1,669 Melbourne, Australia Tornado_ALIVE
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Posts: 1,669 Melbourne, Australia | If Klaus is right I should be adding weight to my boat on heavy air days. I've never seen anyone do that
Actually we do this on landyachts and several larger racing Cats and Tris have waterballast in this way. It is being done; you were just never around to see it. <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" /> Wouter Water ballast in the transom.... Or what the big Multi sailors like to call them, the 'Oh [censored] Tanks'. If they had a choice, they would prefer to run without them but are necessary for saftey | | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: Stewart]
#138061 03/31/08 05:08 AM 03/31/08 05:08 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | Apparently Uffa Fox (designer of the laser dinghy) didn't look around too much. Many racing mono's have waterballast (Volvo ocean, Classe Mini (the open fleet), large cats and tri like Orange). Many competition landyachters put (bags of) sand in their **** during days with strong winds and competition glider planes use a significant amount of waterballast to improve both airspeed and distance covered before having to find another thermal to regain altitude for the next leg. Of course keel boats need weight on the end of their "fin" to even be able to make forward progress and sailing ships or a past era (galjons and clippers) used massive rock or brick ballast placed inside the hull on the keelline to stablize the boat, they would capize otherwise. Actually these bricks would be transported in the otherwise empty ship to the colonies where part of it was unloaded and used to build the settler towns. This was possible as the return cargo of species and other goods would make up for the reduction in this ballast. I guess the designers of all these championship craft are just misguided. If they had a choice, they would prefer to run without them but are necessary for saftey
But they don't have that choice as the alternative is to cut down on the saildrive and that loses more performance. Therefor it is not only a matter of safety, it is a matter of performance where they are unwilling to solve the issue by powering down the rig (loose performance) Wouter
Last edited by Wouter; 03/31/08 05:11 AM.
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: jimi]
#138062 03/31/08 05:25 AM 03/31/08 05:25 AM |
Joined: Feb 2008 Posts: 242 Brisveagas Aido
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Posts: 242 Brisveagas | Well put Jimmi. <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif" alt="" />
Aido Viper 288
| | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: Wouter]
#138063 03/31/08 05:31 AM 03/31/08 05:31 AM |
Joined: Feb 2006 Posts: 3,348 fin.
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Posts: 3,348 | Apparently Uffa Fox (designer of the laser dinghy) didn't look around too much.
Wouter
C'mon Wout, that's not fair! The man was brilliant. http://www.uffafox.com/uffabiog.htmbtw- I can't find any mention of his having designed the Laser. I'm not saying he didn't! Just can't find a citation.
Last edited by Tikipete; 03/31/08 05:46 AM.
| | | Re: How important is relative boat weight?
[Re: Cheshirecatman]
#138064 03/31/08 05:55 AM 03/31/08 05:55 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | There are alot of misconceptions associated with boat weight, some falsehoods even. Don't forget that each extra lb. of weight in the boat/crew is another lb. of water that water that has to be moved out of the way for each boat length travelled, plus additional skin friction/drag.
First of all, the same water that is pushed out of the water pushes back against the hull on the rear part of the hull and thus negates a very large portion of the "push-away" drag on the front part. The form drag is actually ONLY the net difference between the "push-away" and "push-back" phenomenon and in a frictionless fluid this net difference would be zero, resulting in zero drag. In real life fluids like water are not frictionless and the amount of internal friction forces for a given fluid determines the amount of form drag. That is why the same hull in water has less form drag then say in oil. Therefor the popular representation ;"each extra lb. of weight in the boat/crew is another lb. of water that water that has to be moved out of the way for each boat length travelled" is misleading as it omits the part where the same additional lbs pushed back later and gives back some of the energy lost on the front part of the hull. Secondly for some factor to be very important for the overall performance of a sailcraft it needs to constitude a significant part over the overall drag. If a given component only makes up 10% of the total drag then a 25% reduction of that factor only amounts to 2.5% drag reduction of the total with an even less performance gain (= for floating objects typically (1-1.5%) The team for the C-class catamara Miss Nylex publized some of their research data and I give some of their conclusions regarding drag factors. Hull drag (subtotal = 35%) -1- wave/form drag = 15% -2- skin friction drag = 20% Sail drag (subtotal = 25%) -1- form drag = 9% -2- induced drag= 16 % Centreboards = 20% parasitic drag (group of 7 subcomponents like rigging and crew each less the 4%) = 20% Note that even form and skin drag combined only make up for 35% of the total drag on a C-class catamaran with a highly efficient wingsail. On our catamarans the rig is less efficient and the sail associated drags will increase reducing the relative magnitudes of the hull form and skin drag factors. 35% may sound like a large portion but we still haven't completed the analysis yet. 1% additional weight doesn't increase the hull related drag by 1% of 35% = 0.35%, it is less. This is because of the non-linear dependence of volume (weight) and surface area upon size. We all know this to be true as a bottle that is twice as large will have 4 times the surface area and 8 time the enclosed volume (weight). Assuming the hull can be optimized for a given boatweight and crewweight then for each 1% of additional weight you only have to entlarge the hull by 0.33% resulting in similar fractions (0.66%) of increased hull area and crossectional area. Also the fractions became smaller within increased additional weights, again due to the non-linear behaviour. Basically (a simple example) an additional kg on a 100 kg boat + 75 kg crew (0.57% weight increase) results in a hull drag reduction from 35.00% to 34.86%. Which on the total drag of a sailcraft like Miss Nylex results in a less then 0.140% reduction => ... => on average 0.1% performance increase for a waterborne craft (= about 3 second per hour racing). Of course this is for lightweight boat with a singlehanding crew with everything else like sailcut and windconditions being perfectly equal. When looking at doublehanded crews on heavy boats the difference becomes MUCH smaller as 1 kg difference here will be a much smaller fraction of the total. In effect the solo sailor on a lightweight singlehander is the worst case scenario. However, allowing different sailcuts (formula classes instead of One-design) is so potent that it is able to complete ofset this weight dependancy, as proven over and over again in the A-cat class where 85kg skippers are competitive with 65 kg skippers on a world championship level. That is how small the dependence of weight in the larger picture can be and why OD garanteed equality in performance is such a myth. In several cases the OD character of a class makes the differences in performance worse ! We should now do the analyis on 1% difference in sailarea and see the difference between that and the dependency on weight. That tells an interesting story as well and why water or sand ballast can be an advantage on sailboats and landyachts. Wouter
Last edited by Wouter; 03/31/08 05:59 AM.
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
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