| Re: Bridle Vane on a Nacra 6.0na
[Re: SoggyCheetoh]
#15850 01/28/03 03:24 PM 01/28/03 03:24 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA Kevin Rose
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Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA | I've got a Davis Telo-Cat vane mounted on top of my foil. It's mounted with an adapter that's rivited to the top of the foil. I had to bend the rod that the vane is attached to more than 90 degrees in order to level the vane. The vane rides a little higher than the foil. No complaints about how it works.
Kevin Rose
N6.0na #215
Lake Champlain (New England's "west coast")
Burlington, Vermont
| | | Re: Bridle Vane on a Nacra 6.0na
[Re: Marschassault]
#15852 01/29/03 10:14 AM 01/29/03 10:14 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA Kevin Rose
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Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA | There are vanes on the market designed to clamp to the forestay. With the N6.0, however, the bridle rides ahead of the tack and doesn't allow anything to be mounted to the stay. You may be able to mount it on the post. As for drilling the foil, the adapter I have on mine is mounted near the leading edge of the foil with two rivets. While I'm no engineer, I don't see the mount as creating a stress point any more than the mount for the striker post. (Mine's been in place for six years.)
Kevin Rose
N6.0na #215
Lake Champlain (New England's "west coast")
Burlington, Vermont
| | | Re: Bridle Vane on a Nacra 6.0na
[Re: SoggyCheetoh]
#15854 01/29/03 11:05 AM 01/29/03 11:05 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 47 Mark Meis
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Posts: 47 | When I had a 6.0, I riveted the telocat clip to the bottom of the foil and then bent the post upward. Also drilled a retainer clip hole in the rod to secure the rod and wind indicator. After I put a spinnaker pole on the boat I had to remove the clip for the pole would go under the foil.
So in hindsight I would go with a top mount clip. But ... I am no longer comfortable with drilling additional holes in the center of the foil. I have seen 4 or 5 of these foils fail. Typically they fail because of a fitting or dolphin striker rod issue but I recall seeing a foil folding. This is not pretty.
Good luck.
Mark
C28R no. 140
Houston, TX
| | | Re: Bridle Vane on a Nacra 6.0na
[Re: Mark Meis]
#15855 01/29/03 11:48 AM 01/29/03 11:48 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA Kevin Rose
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Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA | I would suspect that a folding foil would most likely be caused by an improperly set pre-bend, allowing the foil to bend in a downward direction under load.
Kevin Rose
N6.0na #215
Lake Champlain (New England's "west coast")
Burlington, Vermont
| | | Re: Bridle Vane on a Nacra 6.0na
[Re: Eric Anderson]
#15858 01/29/03 04:06 PM 01/29/03 04:06 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA Kevin Rose
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Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA | Hi Eric,
On foils that you've seen that have folded in the middle, was there an indication of what caused the failure?
Kevin Rose
N6.0na #215
Lake Champlain (New England's "west coast")
Burlington, Vermont
| | | Re: science of Statics, a very short course
[Re: samevans]
#15861 01/29/03 07:02 PM 01/29/03 07:02 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA Kevin Rose
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Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA | Sam,
OK, but now another question. How is drilling a couple of small holes in the foil different than drilling holes in the beam to mount cleats, etc.? Aren't the forces similar?
Kevin Rose
N6.0na #215
Lake Champlain (New England's "west coast")
Burlington, Vermont
| | | KISS
[Re: SoggyCheetoh]
#15862 01/29/03 09:34 PM 01/29/03 09:34 PM |
Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 3,355 Key Largo, FL and Put-in-Bay, ... RickWhite 
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Mar 2002
Posts: 3,355 Key Largo, FL and Put-in-Bay, ... | First of all, the bridal fly is forward of where you are when sailing downwind -- and sailing downwind is why you use a bridal fly, right? So, forget the bridal fly and tie a piece of 8-TrackTape (easy to find cheap at any yard sale) to the sidestay. That way you can actually tell if it is 90-degrees, aft of that, or forward of that.Much easier to read when it is reading from where you are sitting. Much easier to read and significantly less expensive. Interestingly, When I fly a spinnaker I have a tape on the end of the pole, one on the bridal fly and one on the side stay. Guess what! They all read a different apparent wind direction. The one at the end of the pole is almost 90-degrees, the one on the bridal is more aft, and the one on the sidestay looks as if I am on a close reach. Use it all.  Rick | | | Re: KISS
[Re: RickWhite]
#15863 01/30/03 08:47 AM 01/30/03 08:47 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 2,844 42.904444 N; 88.008586 W Todd_Sails
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Posts: 2,844 42.904444 N; 88.008586 W | Oh, c'mon Rick, devils advocate here: You mean you can get the same thing accomplished, with just a cassette tape? (I use an old VHS tape, kinda like the 8 track ) You're saying, you don't have to spent 20+ dollars, drill standing rigged parts of boats, and use a simple tape somewhere that basically does the same thing? c'mon now! Actually a rarely use the tape either, just feel in the hairs of my forearms, and the tell-tales on the sails, my spin has tell tales too. Drives my crew crazy sometimes. I'll probably start using the tape more though, sometimes, the old hair on the forearam technique isn't quite as accurate on the true wind 8*)
F-18 Infusion #626- SOLD it!
'Long Live the Legend of Chris Kyle'
| | | Tape can be HIGH TECH!
[Re: Todd_Sails]
#15864 01/30/03 10:08 AM 01/30/03 10:08 AM |
Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 3,355 Key Largo, FL and Put-in-Bay, ... RickWhite 
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Mar 2002
Posts: 3,355 Key Largo, FL and Put-in-Bay, ... | Now we are really getting into the hi-tech part of this. Actually, cassette tape is too light and dances too much to read properly. Sort of flitters around while it should be settling down and doing a good job. That is why I use the heavier, 8-Track Tape. But, if you can't find 8-Track anymore, you can buy some reel-to-reel tape at Radio Shack. Tim Johnson told me they are both 1.25, or something like that. But I still like my 8-Track. Using some really fast stuff now: Abba  Rick | | | Re: Tape can be HIGH TECH!
[Re: dave taylor]
#15866 01/30/03 11:06 AM 01/30/03 11:06 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 2,844 42.904444 N; 88.008586 W Todd_Sails
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 2,844 42.904444 N; 88.008586 W | For me, it's still my VHS copy of some 'Star Trek' episodes! Now that's what I call 'high tech'!
F-18 Infusion #626- SOLD it!
'Long Live the Legend of Chris Kyle'
| | | Re: science of Statics, a very short course
[Re: Kevin Rose]
#15867 01/30/03 11:55 AM 01/30/03 11:55 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 390 samevans
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Posts: 390 | Kevin, There are differences and similarities. Yes, the FORCES are very similar with bending and compression. The big differences are the EFFECTS due to the dissimilar shapes of the two extrusions. Resistance to bending forces is directly related to the structural shape of the element, as well as the composition of the material. The foil is an almost flat wing shaped tube. Unsupported it has very little strength in the flat direction. A crossbar is generally a round or square tube. This shape has the highest shape related structural strength in multiple directions. Holes reduce the cross-sectional area of the foil shape by a higher percentage than the tube shape. I don't believe the holes ALONE reduce the strength of either extrusion by enough to impair their performance. The difference that I see and the potential problem, is the effect of galvanic corrosion, particularly in the foil due to the closed ends. There is always some GC when stainless hardware and aluminum in contact. In extrusions that are ventilated or get rinsed regularly, the damage is minimal. The foil very small and GC COULD eat away a critical percentage of its strength. A NACRA crossbar is very large and often ventilated or rinsed regularly. BUT, even a crossbar can corrode enough to fail. At the Old Spice - Wide Open, Open Regatta, on Pamlico Sound, I saw a Hobie 16 front crossbar snap approxmately halfway between the mast and end casting. Upon examination, we could see that the break occurred at the location of one of the jib track pop rivets. There was no outward sign of corrosion but on the inside you could see how the corrosion had eaten a ring around the tube. I would be concerned that something similar could happen to a foil. The hose clamp idea is the easiest solution. | | |
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