| Re: Spi + planing hull = ?
[Re: BRoberts]
#28179 01/29/04 11:20 PM 01/29/04 11:20 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | [upwind,] The reduced load on the centerboard now falls on the rudder as an increase in load. Therefore increase the rudder area, rudder balanced, in direct proportion to the increased load it now carries. Now the centerboard is happy and so is the rudder and lee helm with the spinnaker up has been solved...No more radical mast rake required and no more overloaded rudders with a hair trigger ready to stall sailing to windward. Wait a minute Bill...you moved the board forward to counter lee helm induced by the spinnaker and agree that the rudder loading is increased upwind. To that point you can make the daggerboard smaller but the rudder bigger. Somehow you conclude that the forward daggerboard placement also helps prevent rudder stalling upwind. But you just said the rudder loads are higher upwind now as a result of the daggerboard placement - did I miss something? Supose we took an I20 and moved the boards forward as you prescribe (this boat runs very little mast rake and it's forward beam is very far forward on the boat). This would only make the windward rudder stalling problem more severe.
Last edited by Jake; 01/29/04 11:21 PM.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Spi + planing hull = ?
[Re: rbj]
#28182 01/30/04 03:46 AM 01/30/04 03:46 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe |
We're looking for solutions of problems that don't exist.
Why does Bill think that leehelm is a "dragon" ? Moreso than weatherhelm ?
Does any of you realize why a boat is setup for weatherhelm upwind ? It appears that the want for weatherhelm has become a dogma that must be satisfied at all costs.
-1- You have weatherhelm on big boats because that is the safety zone for them and because tacking becomes difficult without it.
-2- On smaller boats you have it in order to get some positive return on an item that otherwise only introduces drag.
On downwind the first point is useless; the safety zone here is to lee. How about weatherhelm when singlehanded doucing the spi ? You rather want the boat to track downwind then weathervane up. BLa bla bla Balanced rudders, bla bla bla. IT IS STILL WEATHERHELM ! Put your rudders sligthly of centre and you're gone.
Point 2 is totally mute on downwind legs. Good crews pull up their boards because alot of lateal resistance is really not needed on downwind legs. They leave a smaller area in place to keep some minimal sensitivity to steering. This moves CLR forward as well as on all boats the CLR component of the hull alone is forward of the daggerboard.
I can honestly say that I have never met a leehelm dragon while sailing a cat that was designed to sail with a spinnaker. And to complete it ; I never saw that dragon after adding a spi on other boats except the Dart 18 and a handfull exceptions as well.
I did experience the downsides of shared lift on the 49-er skiff and the downsides of long spi poles.
Excessive mast rake due to spinnaker then ? Nop, haven't seen it or even needed it on my own boats. Mast rake on Hobie 16 or even Taipan 4.9 then ? That is for other reasons and we can't really say that it is holding these boats back CAN WE, Bill ?
Spi pole length at 50 % of hoist height spi to prevent diving ? Great ! F16 runs poles of 3.5/7.5 = 47 %. What a difference those 50%-47% = 3 % makes ! That just doesn't fly with me. So I see really no need to put a longer pole on my F16.
What else was introduced to make the ARC-17 appear superior to all other designs ? Ohh yeah shared lift.
Massive tiller loads when the rudder kick up or when leaving the beach with the rudders trailing (unbalanced rudders !)
In my surf ? No, thank you !
Not using shared lift on other boats makes them slow or slower ? Hum, ARC-17 with spi = rating 70.2 ; Taipan 4.9 WITHOUT spi = 68.1 and to show that there are no ill feelings between us we'll just forget about those 26 % in more (main+jib) sailarea that Bill has put on the ARC-17.
I say that sums it up quite nicely. Thank God Bill uses shared lift on the ARC-17 or else it would be sailing of a rating of 75 and be looking over its shoulder for the fastest Hobie 16's I suspect.
A while back Bill also chastized all other designers for designing overweight boats and you'd expressed F16's were nothing special at 107 kg including all sailing gear !
Well, didn't he prove us all wrong by making the ARC-17 = 126 kg EXCLUDING the weight of the sails (min 8 kg) and spi package (min 5 kg). This puts you on a level with the 1976 Dart 18 design which is of equal length.
To daggerboard wells then : one for upwind sailing and one for downwind sailing ?
I will garantee you that you'll be at the leeward mark behind all boats that use only one daggerboard well.
How much time does it take to move the two boards from one well to another ? 10 seconds ? That is quite fast.
10 seconds that you could already be travelling at full speed under spinnaker = 50 - 100 meters less distance travelled ?
I can assure you that you will never be able to compensate for this loss even if the new position of the boards would make your craft more effecient.
As it is right now in the F18 a 3 second delay in setting the spi at the A-mark is enough to loose you 1 to 5 places in the field.
A lot of crews don't even readjust the jib sheet and outhaul of the main in tight racing as that takes to much time in which they can easily loose a tactical beneficial position. Most of the time they do that later in the leg during a lull or when the skipper has one hand free. Getting the spi up quickly is the most important thing. Repositioning the boards is not what you want to do if that delays the setting of the spi. That is even IF it would be necessary
BECAUSE
The balancing of the rudders that Bills shared lift needs to get rid of the weatherhelm feel on the upwind legs will ALSO remove the feel of the leehelm on downwind legs that other boats MAY have.
So the whole discussion comes down on wether having leehelm on downwind legs (not the feel of it as that can be taken away by balanced rudders) is a SIGNIFICANTLY bad thing performance wise ? If leehelm is assumed to be present, that is.
This does not appear to be the case. And untill a newly designed shared lift ARC F18 starts beating all other F18's on the course I think we'll be at a loss to proof that it does significantly influence performance in a bad manner.
Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: Spi + planing hull = ?
[Re: rbj]
#28183 01/30/04 08:22 AM 01/30/04 08:22 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 371 Michigan, USA sparky
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Posts: 371 Michigan, USA | Jerry,
I let go of the tiller if I am going forward to adjust downhaul because holding the tiller while moving around on the boat causes me to veer all over the place. Occasionally, I will pull the mainsheet with both hands while on the wire, so I set the tiller down, sheet in, and pick the tiller up. I also put the tiller to rest if adjusting outhaul, mast rotation, or board position. Any one of these is a brief interlude of letting the tiller rest unattended.
Les Gallagher
| | | Re: Spi + planing hull = ?
[Re: brobru]
#28184 01/30/04 09:30 AM 01/30/04 09:30 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 371 Michigan, USA sparky
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Posts: 371 Michigan, USA | Bruce,
I run my boards about 8" up all the time. If I thought I could afford the time, I might pull them another 12" when going downwind but for now, feel that it does not provide enough benefit for my "'round the bouys" racing to take my mind off steering the boat to go play with the boards up and down at A and C marks. I have not seen any difference upwind with my boards up 8" and all the other I-17R's with their boards all the way down.
Les Gallagher
| | | Re: Spi + planing hull = ?
[Re: Wouter]
#28185 01/30/04 09:36 AM 01/30/04 09:36 AM |
Joined: Aug 2003 Posts: 284 S. Florida BRoberts
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Posts: 284 S. Florida | Hi Wouter, I saw a T4.9 at the Tradewinds Regatta two weeks ago for the first time. That boat looks like a great design. Did you design that one? It reminds me of Poison Ivy. Good boat design has weather helm for two reasons: 1) From a boat performance point of view you always want weather helm. The daggerboard is always generating lift to windward. When the rudder is lifting in the same direction, the induced drag from the two foils is a minimun. If the rudder is producing lee helm, opposite the daggerboard, then the daggerboard must generate lift equal and opposite the sail side force plus generate additional side force to windward to overcome the negative side force the rudder is generating, lee helm. This situation, lee helm, makes the daggerboard work harder, generate more lift, which makes more drag. 2)Helm satbility. You want the helm to always to be pulling lightly in the same direction from the skipper for ease of handling. You do not want the helm to reverse between weather and lee helm, especially unexpectedly. This makes the boat difficult to sail well and it is draggy underwater; a slower boat results. I'm not going to address the rest of your comments because I see an ugly attitude and your goal here is not to help anyone. So long, Bill | | | Re: spi or no spi
[Re: samevans]
#28186 01/30/04 11:15 AM 01/30/04 11:15 AM |
Joined: Aug 2003 Posts: 284 S. Florida BRoberts
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Posts: 284 S. Florida | Hi Sam, All SCs were sold without spinnakers. That was before 1992, 1978 through 1991. In 1992 the product name was changed to ARC products and spinnakers and self tacking jibs etc became an option or standard on all products, the 22, the 27 and the 30. See the Aquarius-Sail.com web site for this information. These products were/are designed with spinnakers. >I'm sorry I forgot, the 22 also has the CB trunk located right behind the main beam to prevent lee helm with spinnaker up. >I am saying that moving the CB forward is a better way to trim a boat out with spinnaker than raking the mast back which leaves the rudder overloaded and the CB underloaded sailing to windward without spinnaker. The boat will sail to windward like this but the induced drag from the CB and rudder is greater than it could be. The boat is out of trim sloop rigged. >A boat with centrboards moved forward to accomodate the forward migration of sail center of effort due to the spinnaker and downsized boards to match the smaller side load they now are expozed to in this new forward location and upsized rudders to match the new increased side load they are exposed to due to the forward located centerboard HAS THE SAME CENTER OF LATERAL RESISTANCE as the boats original CB/rudder arrangement. The advantages here are: 1) that the centerboard is so far forward that the sail CE with spinnaker up cannot get in front of the centerboard and cause lee helm. 2) With spinnaker down the centerboard and rudder are sized to match the loads they are exposed to and this results in minimum induced drag from the CB and rudder, a faster boat to windward. > At the recent Tradewinds Regatta I sailed an ARC 17 against several other boats for my first time in 25 years. We sailed poorly, went three times around the long course when I should have sailed two times around the short course, in the first heat. Then on Sunday my crew, who had never sailed on the boat or with a spinaker before, thought we shouldn't try the spinnaker in the 20 knot winds so we didn't. We still won the open class on corrected time and did finish a couple of heats first boat across the finish line. Our assigned PN was 70.2. That number is coming down as a data base is developed for the ARC 17 with spinnaker. Good Sailing, Sam, Bill | | | Increasing rudder dimentions
[Re: Jake]
#28189 01/30/04 02:06 PM 01/30/04 02:06 PM |
Joined: Dec 2001 Posts: 5,590 Naples, FL waterbug_wpb
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Posts: 5,590 Naples, FL | With respect to Mr. Robert's implementation of the "shared lift" concept:
1) Would increasing rudder size also increase the apparant "load"(for lack of a better term) on the driver? After about 70 miles, even the "finger touch" tillers tend to cause fatigue. Yanking pizza-pan sized rudders could certainly kill off the weak over 500 or 1000 miles!
2) I can visualize the advantages you describe in windward/leeward sailing (around the cans), but would there be any advantage in a distance format that ends up being primarily close-reaching (no spin)?
Jay
| | | Re: Spi + planing hull = ?
[Re: Wouter]
#28191 01/30/04 02:42 PM 01/30/04 02:42 PM |
Joined: Dec 2003 Posts: 186 rbj OP
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Posts: 186 | Wouter,
Thanks for your comments.
In my limited experience with spi's on a monohull, I have to agree with you that some lee helm downwind isn't a bad thing, although if it's too much I would guess it might set you up for an accidental gybe if you let go of the tiller for too long at the wrong time, especially in waves.
I agree with you that two CB wells would take too much time to manage if you were racing usual courses and if you tried to do it at the time you hit the mark; I acknowledged in my post that it would take more time to change over from upwind to downwind. This is, of course, unless the change was done on the flying hull well in advance of hitting the mark when there's time to do it and at which time it would't have adverse consequences.
Actually, in my original post, I was curious if two wells would work well for cruising, recreational sailing, and long distance racing where it might offer a very light touch both upwind and downwind for long legs avoiding any strain on the skipper, and in the case of long distance racing, might offer a slightly lower drag and more efficiency which could add up to slight performance gains over the times and distances involved.
Jerry | | |
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