| Re: The sail area didn't hurt either.
[Re: Chris9]
#27042 12/19/03 10:43 AM 12/19/03 10:43 AM |
Joined: Aug 2003 Posts: 284 S. Florida BRoberts
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Posts: 284 S. Florida | Hi Chris, The spinnaker style I like, have the most success with, is the tall, long luff sail and it is not max area but it is max luff length. Since most of the forward pull from the spinnaker comes from the front 1/3rd of the sail, max luff length is more important than max area. The max area spinnaker will only sail well deep downwind. When you try to heat it up, sail higher, it overpowers you and you can't hold the boat down in a breeze and it pulls mostly sideways anyway which loads up the daggerboards and makes more drag in the water. The max area spinnaker has a narrow window of successful application. The higher aspect ratio spinnaker will sail well over a wide variety of downwind sailing angles from hot to deep. Unlike the classical spinnaker, the leech of this spinnaker must be flat and quick to twist open and not backwind the mainsail. Remenber that a hooking leech is producing thrust to the rear. When you stand behind your boat in line with the spinnaker leech and the sail is trimmed hot, you should not be able to see the leeward side of the spinnaker. If you can, that spinnaker area is producing thrust to the rear. The first step to a good spinnaker is the pole. Longer poles are better. They make for longer luff sails and they allow the spinnaker force to lift the bow. Copy the ARC pole support system in general. Select a pelican stricker tube length that puts the pole at whatever height you want it. The pelican stricker tube takes the vertical load from the spinnaker/spinnaker pole and puts it the forestay bridle wires where it goes to ground in the hulls. Good luck, Bill | | | Re: The sail area didn't hurt either.
[Re: BRoberts]
#27044 12/19/03 03:08 PM 12/19/03 03:08 PM |
Joined: Nov 2001 Posts: 351 Dallas, Texas thom OP
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Posts: 351 Dallas, Texas | Bill- I think a pic says a few words in this case. As can be seen all lines are internal [ie jib luff tensioner, self tacking jib sheet, spin tack line, spin tack luff tensioner for roller furling code zero]. My spin pole was setup for two different types of spins. The pelican striker is shown extending from the bottom. If you are looking for the top of the line engineering then call Tom @ Aquarius Sail. The quality is top notch and his demonstrated experience level is unparralled. Quality first pays off in the long run. thommerrill F25c 009 Charisma ARC22 2234 Widowmaker FMS 20 57-being refinished thom | | | Re: Striker or Strut?
[Re: BRoberts]
#27046 12/19/03 05:50 PM 12/19/03 05:50 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC Tornado
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Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC | On the current Tornado rig, we've got a pole that according to your description, is a pelican striker...but I've heard it called simply a "strut" between the bridles & pole. Unlike the picture shown above, there are a pair of stays attached to the pole where the strut attaches...leading out (athwartships) & down to the forestay bridle tangs on the inner gunwales. From looking at the whole arrangement, I've wondered what the strut actually does for you, since any upward flex at the mid pole point should be resisted by the mid pole stays. Granted these are at a fairly shallow angle compared to the forstay bridle stays, but I can't see them allowing enough flex to load the strut to any level. It all seems kinda redundant...perhaps we can get rid of either the midpole stays or the strut? Here's a picture of the Marstrom setup:
Mike Dobbs Tornado CAN 99 "Full Tilt"
| | | Re: Striker or Strut?
[Re: thom]
#27048 12/19/03 08:05 PM 12/19/03 08:05 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD Mark Schneider
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Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD | We rigged a P19 up with a pole this summer. Since the boat was old... he was using a Nacra Bridle foil to resist the bows towing in. He had lenghened his forestay to use the nacra bridle foil. The MX jib luff extended well below the original bridle wire intersection and was tacked onto the foil. Essentially duplicating the strut used on the Marstrom tornado to lower the jib tack. We rigged the pole below the foil, and tried to induce the proper amount of prebend into the spin pole using the bow bridles.... Oops.. the loads needed to bend the pole (at this angle)simply towed in the bows (despite the bow foil). The solution was the pelican striker that was used by Bill on the Supercat pole (below the strut). The pelican striker allowed us to prebend the pole the proper amount without transfering the loads to the bows. The bow bridle serves to keep the tip centered and slightly load the pole up.
The Tornado gets away without a pelican striker because the pole is carried quite a bit higher then we could on the P19. The class spec is that the jib tack cannot extend below 50 centimeters of the intersection of the bridle. Essentially this carries the pole at a fairly high angle and the Tornado bows can handle the loads.
If you are going to maximize your luff length by lowering the pole as much as you can... well you have to compensate somewhere.
Take Care Mark
crac.sailregattas.com
| | | Re: Striker or Strut?
[Re: BRoberts]
#27050 12/19/03 09:53 PM 12/19/03 09:53 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD Mark Schneider
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Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD | Hi Folks. What's the origen of the name Pelican striker.
I assumed that since the Dolphin striker would smack the fish on the tops of their heads... AND Since the pelican would probably sit a bit taller... then next highest strut pointing down would be the pelican striker.
Why isn't the spin pole strut called a pelican striker?
Hmm. I will go get another beer Mark
crac.sailregattas.com
| | | Re: Striker or Strut?
[Re: BRoberts]
#27052 12/20/03 09:47 AM 12/20/03 09:47 AM |
Joined: Nov 2001 Posts: 351 Dallas, Texas thom OP
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Posts: 351 Dallas, Texas | Hello Bill- I stand corrected...I thought it was the opposite. I thought the strut was on top...you learn something every day. thom | | | Wrong, wrong, wrong !!!
[Re: thom]
#27053 12/20/03 01:04 PM 12/20/03 01:04 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe |
Bill,
I'm sorry to say this but you're confusing alot of people for no good reason.
A pelican striker is the thing BELOW the spi pole. It's name is derived from a similar setup on old schooner rigs which have such a device to stabilize their jib poles and that is BELOW the bowsprit as well.
The thing on top the spinnaker pole is the Strut.
And really Bill, pelican strikers on spinnaker poles are NOT necessary and only make things complicated and heavy. Look at the I-20's and Tornado. NOBODY Is using pelican strikers anymore. Even the boats slugging it out in the Worrell do fine without one. If they hold up than why should other (regatta) boats have them ?
Stop reinventing definitions that are already in place.
Okay my flame suit is on and now anyone can tell me who I as a European pantsie don't know diddly [censored]. Considering you all pretty much sailing European boats by now makes your flaming pretty rediculous. Not Bill, not you.
Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: Believe the headsail is a Hooter by Calvert
[Re: BRoberts]
#27056 12/20/03 07:09 PM 12/20/03 07:09 PM |
Joined: Nov 2001 Posts: 351 Dallas, Texas thom OP
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Posts: 351 Dallas, Texas | Wrong Bill- That hasn't been my experience with my roller furling spin. I don't the other guys on the Fboat list with furling code zeros have experienced that either. If they have they haven't mentioned it. I believe they got theirs from Elliott Pattison while I got my from GM Sails of Austrailia. If you would like to see an example of Elliot Pattison furling code Zero go to Mike Leneman's Multimarine.com site and select the "Products" button and go to the bottom of the page. Or you can go to the Farrier Marine site and look at the F33 update for 12/2/2003 and see the furling North Masthead spin pictured" thom
Last edited by thom; 12/20/03 08:31 PM.
| | | Re: Wrong, wrong, wrong !!!
[Re: Wouter]
#27057 12/20/03 09:11 PM 12/20/03 09:11 PM |
Joined: Aug 2001 Posts: 1,307 Asuncion, Paraguay Luiz
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Posts: 1,307 Asuncion, Paraguay | ...pelican strikers on spinnaker poles are NOT necessary and only make things complicated and heavy Wouter, I am not sure about this. A strut over the spinaker pole (whatever the name) doesn't seem to be unnecessary, complicated or heavy. If you want to extend the jib foot down to the spinaker pole, just add a vertical strut and it's done. The strut will also reduce the free length of the pole, so it will serve two structural purposes. Seems quite simple, light and efficient to me. You can avoid the strut if the jib foot is fixed to the bridles instead of the pole, but then the foot is higher and you loose sail area exactly where it generates more power (luff) and less heel (low). Not a smart move. You can avoid the strut by lowering the bridles so that they attach the hulls to the spinaker pole, but then they wil partially submerge when the boat heels (more drag). Also, not a smart alternative. If my memory is correct, all the maxi cats use one of those bridles, as most cruising cats do. Am I missing something here? Could you please detail your point of view? Thanks, Luiz
Luiz
| | | I think I could have worded that more politely ...
[Re: BRoberts]
#27058 12/20/03 09:31 PM 12/20/03 09:31 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | Bill,
I think I could have worded that more politely, my appologies. I've just reread my post and although I stand by the content, I think I did you wrong on the presentation. I will blame the 10 cups of coffee for that but also present my appologies to you.
Regards,
Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: Wrong, wrong, wrong !!!
[Re: Luiz]
#27059 12/21/03 09:21 AM 12/21/03 09:21 AM |
Joined: Aug 2003 Posts: 284 S. Florida BRoberts
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Posts: 284 S. Florida | Hi Luiz, "If you want to extend the jib foot down to the spinaker pole, just add a vertical strut and it's done. The strut will also reduce the free length of the pole, so it will serve two structural purposes. Seems quite simple, light and efficient to me".
You are 'right on' again; you understand correctly. The equation for 'max allowable load' in a tall slender column is: P = Phi**2 x E x I / L**2 . This is a stability equation and has to do with 'buckling failures'. The import thing to notice here is that the moment of inertia, I, is in the numerator and the the unsupported length, L, is in denominator. For spinnaker pole schemes without support at the pole mid point, L is the total length of the pole. If the pole is stabalized at pole midpoint so that it can't move vertically and it can't move sideways, then the L term in the equation is L/2 which is then squared. This makes the denominator 1/4 as large as it is for the unsupported pole and therefore the I term in the numerator can be 1/4th as large, a much smaller diameter pole, and lighter weight also. On the SC20 at first I used a 3/4inch diameter SS thin walled tube 2ft long to connect the mid pole point to the apex of the forestay bridle wires. This short tube buckled and I had to go up to a 1 inch diameter SS tube. The system really works and my spinnaker pole is much lighter weight than others of similiar length. Bill | | |
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