| Load Path sails #164330 01/07/09 03:08 PM 01/07/09 03:08 PM |
Joined: Aug 2005 Posts: 2,921 Michigan PTP OP
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Posts: 2,921 Michigan | Seems like this is the way of the future, as it seems it should be. They are actually cheaper than radial cut sails because they are less labor intensive (I believe). There is also a good amount of competition because each major sailmaker has its own version (3DL, Tapedrive, etc). of course it hurts the smaller, local, sailmakers. Anyone have any downsides aside from maybe less durability?
Last edited by PTP; 01/07/09 03:10 PM.
| | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: chip]
#164426 01/08/09 10:54 AM 01/08/09 10:54 AM | andrewscott
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Unregistered | I did a little reading up on this.. looks pretty neat. i would love to save weight and gain strength !!! If the cost comes down with "economies of scale" then i am in!!!! (maybe)  on another note... in my dream future... i want solar panel main sails to power my radio, radar ./sonar etc, and my jib to have a flexible HDTV display on it!!! that way i can get paid to advertise, project lights when my radar (or sonar) suggest it and i can watch the game when i am taking a break from sailing! I know.... i am dreaming... but i am at work, at my desk... what do you expect me to do? work??? | | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: ]
#164429 01/08/09 11:02 AM 01/08/09 11:02 AM |
Joined: Feb 2006 Posts: 3,348 fin.
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Posts: 3,348 | | | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: chip]
#164431 01/08/09 11:08 AM 01/08/09 11:08 AM |
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Posts: 2,921 Michigan | Chip, Thanks for your post... nice to see a professional's inside view. Going back and looking now, they do seem to be a little more expensive for the material. As far as beach cats... there is a pic of a wave with a LP sail on the catsailor front page somewhere. The loads on a wave sail have to be fierce.  Although the labor to create the fabric is significant, the finishing part of the sail is a lot less than doing a radial cut sail.
Last edited by PTP; 01/08/09 11:11 AM.
| | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: Rolf_Nilsen]
#164449 01/08/09 12:25 PM 01/08/09 12:25 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 833 St. Louis, MO, Mike Hill
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Posts: 833 St. Louis, MO, | Does anyone know how they make the fabric? Wether it be Pentax or Mylar, Kevlar or whatever? It certainly would be interesting to create a machine which could make the material in the proper shape to start with. Put sailmakers out of business sort of. In that no stitching would ever be needed. But you would still need to design the shape.
Mike Hill N20 #1005
| | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: Mike Hill]
#164450 01/08/09 12:34 PM 01/08/09 12:34 PM |
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Posts: 2,921 Michigan | you still need to install the tapes (edges) and patches (corners) for reinforcement. Also webbing and grommets. there is still plenty for a sailmaker to do but not nearly as much as before. I guess machines could do all of that too though. when I ordered the kit to make my screecher I was offered a Bainbridge LP sail which would have only required me to do the reinforcements. The cost was about 10% more for the LP sail (roughly)than an expensive "crosscut laminate" material. The lp sail which would have only required the finishing. Since I do this for fun/hobby I didn't see much fun in just finishing the sail. However, I find sewing the patches and tapes the harder aspect of putting the sail together in a confined space. Sewing the patches on is difficult to do without creating bulging due to the fact you have to roll 9 layers of fabric to fit it under the arm of the machine.
Last edited by PTP; 01/08/09 12:45 PM.
| | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: Mike Hill]
#164453 01/08/09 12:40 PM 01/08/09 12:40 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD Mark Schneider
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Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD | Tony Arends (Racer X sails) made one for his A cat late last summer. It was a beautiful sail but I don't know if he decided that the extra cost justified any performance increase. It looked like king kong could not pull it apart though. On boats with more powerful rigs... it could offer advantages. I think that on the very stiff carbon N20 mast... you might actually be able to bend it with his string sail.
I am not sure... but the F18 and Tornado classes may ban string sails under their "approved sail cloth rule" which would have crushed development in this area.
crac.sailregattas.com
| | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: Mike Hill]
#164455 01/08/09 12:43 PM 01/08/09 12:43 PM |
Joined: May 2003 Posts: 4,451 West coast of Norway Rolf_Nilsen
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Posts: 4,451 West coast of Norway | Does anyone know how they make the fabric? Wether it be Pentax or Mylar, Kevlar or whatever? It certainly would be interesting to create a machine which could make the material in the proper shape to start with. Put sailmakers out of business sort of. In that no stitching would ever be needed. But you would still need to design the shape. What fabric would that be? The sail is built by gluing sheets of mylar together like a crosscut dacron sails. Then it is put on a mould and the fibers are put in place. Then it is closed off with glue or a layer of mylar or scrim. UK had a process where they just taped the fibers on with a tape dispenser So it is mylar and fibers of choice, mainly carbon I think. There are several variations of the process. Some have the panels pre-setup with fibers in the right layout and then assemble the panels to a sail much like a crosscut sail. Then you dont have continous fibers running the length of the sail, but still lighter and better shape holding than tri-radial or Maxx/Flex sails. I bet North would love to get a machine to build the sails with no human hands touching it. Humans make errors while machines do as told (mostly). As of up til now, they have not managed to although the 3DLr is a step on the way. Myself I like having several sailmakers and beeing able to buy the materials I need to build my own sails. | | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: PTP]
#164457 01/08/09 01:03 PM 01/08/09 01:03 PM |
Joined: Sep 2007 Posts: 571 Hamburg Smiths_Cat
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Posts: 571 Hamburg | as far as I understand, these "single piece" sails cannot be changed once they are fabricated. A cross cut sail can be tested and if necessary changed by a sailmaker to your wishes. Crosscut sails can be stiff enough, if they are from the right material like Maxx, at least I think so, but I have never sailed a this material. The seams are more or less parallel to the airstream, hence less drag than a radial sail. If the seams are at the same place as the battens, the friction drag is the same as for a single piece sail, which has battens as well. Since a single piece sail has no seams it is stronger, but how much would be the weight benefit for 20sqm of equal material? 100g or 200g... At the end it is the same choice like for a suit: an expensive, but off the shelf suit or a made-to-measure suit. Even with less exclusive material the tailored suit will always fit better. So, to fuel the discusion, I would say that such a single piece sail is an expensive, less durable sail which is slightly lighter and aerodynamic less efficient (=slower) than a conventional sail, which you figured out with your sailmaker. Or you spend enough money and time for testing until you get the right 3DL or what ever sail to fit your need.
Cheers,
Klaus | | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: Smiths_Cat]
#164458 01/08/09 01:08 PM 01/08/09 01:08 PM |
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Posts: 2,921 Michigan | How many people have had a real discussion with their sailmaker regarding how they want the sail cut? I think you might be able to work with a local sailmaker on shape/etc but then your local sailmaker may not have a lot of experience with multihull sails so you are taking a risk there. The 3 times I have ordered sails no one ever asked about where I sail, how I sail, how much I weigh, etc. I have told them but I seriously doubt they altered anything based on my comments. Maybe it is just me...
Last edited by PTP; 01/08/09 01:09 PM.
| | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: PTP]
#164459 01/08/09 01:15 PM 01/08/09 01:15 PM |
Joined: May 2003 Posts: 4,451 West coast of Norway Rolf_Nilsen
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Posts: 4,451 West coast of Norway | Hi Klaus, the thing with load path sails is that they are light, and hold their shape through the different windspeeds better. A crosscut dacron shape will change its shape and become fuller in gusts, not what we want. They also have the same benefit of less drag as the crosscut sails. I sailed with a Maxx Pen09 mainsail on the Tornado the last season. The cloth was a bit on the light side and you could see how it flexed compared to a tri-radial pentex of a heavier cloth. However, becouse of the ease of construction and the option to select different weights and fibers on the F16s we are building, I'll want Maxx or Flexx the next time over  | | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: PTP]
#164460 01/08/09 01:24 PM 01/08/09 01:24 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD Mark Schneider
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Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD | Maybe it's your sail maker!
My sail maker measured the mast stiffness/ bend, took my weight into consideration and built the luff curve accordingly.
Now... can I actually exploit all of this value... No. I think I have screwed up my mast bend for a season... but that's a different problem.
crac.sailregattas.com
| | | Re: Load Path sails
[Re: Will_R]
#164461 01/08/09 01:25 PM 01/08/09 01:25 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,906 Clermont, FL, USA David Ingram
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The Batchelors had some Norths on a F18 a couple of years ago. I don't remember if they were panneled of 3DL.
The sails were paneled and slow. They looked to be cut too flat to me.
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"
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