| Re: Why is the Tornado so fast
[Re: Rolf_Nilsen]
#50433 06/06/05 04:46 AM 06/06/05 04:46 AM |
Joined: Feb 2004 Posts: 3,528 Looking for a Job, I got credi... scooby_simon Hull Flying, Snow Sliding.... |
Hull Flying, Snow Sliding....
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Posts: 3,528 Looking for a Job, I got credi... | In my opinion:
1: 30 years of refinement of the platform 2: Olympic-class development of sails 3: Olympic-class crews 4: Olympic-class research on how to sail the boat fast
No doubt, many boats could have been as fast or faster, but they have not been subject to the same intense research as the T. It doesn't hurt that the design was fast from the start as well, even if there are faster hull shapes today. The 10 foot beam is a 'must' when the wind increases. I think it could have been even faster with daggerboards instead of centerboards. Yep, I would agree with all that. Some expirements with daggers have been done and the boat is quicker up wind, but no-one decided to jump and make a hull with just daggers. William Sunnocks has a set of inserts to make a standard T box take daggers !
F16 - GBR 553 - SOLD I also talk sport here | | | Re: Why is the Tornado so fast
[Re: Rolf_Nilsen]
#50434 06/06/05 04:58 AM 06/06/05 04:58 AM |
Joined: Feb 2005 Posts: 1,382 Essex, UK Jalani
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Posts: 1,382 Essex, UK | Fully agree with Rolf. But, in addition I would add that as a design, RM-D managed to come up with a boat that, right from its earliest days, was fast, sweet to sail and beautifully balanced. This allowed some fairly radical sailing techniques and/or rig adjustments that you possibly couldn't have got away with on another boat.
John Alani ___________ Stealth F16s GBR527 and GBR538 | | | Re: Tornado - fast
[Re: scooby_simon]
#50436 06/06/05 09:48 AM 06/06/05 09:48 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 800 MI sail6000
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Posts: 800 MI | Yep ,agree with Rolf also and as others noted particularly the calibur of sailors on them . Place these teams on any type of cat --{like f-18hts for example} --in any event --{little AM Cup } in Italy --and they sail them faster than ever previously recorded at higher speeds around the course. The only negative aspect I,ve heard about the T from T sailing teams is the tendancy of the narrow knife like bows to dive into waves when overpowered with the added spin . This makes perfect sence as the original design intended a main and small jib only , and the class wished to maintain the original tolerances for hull design ,which was often in wood or stressed skin plywood method of construction in previous decades. I would like to see more innovation in rigs -sail plans -etc in the 20 ft size range ,--The Marstom 20 seems a beautiful functional lightweight design as well . Real innovation will best develop if there are more open racing type events and classes available for the innovators ,-the speed sailing trials are always fasinating for example . In the 20 ft range there are numerous cat design choises now .The new H-20 is supposed to debue soon ,-the Ventilo 20 designs seem excellent -the Marstom of course -and several others seem comperable to the T or potentially faster with the same calibur sailing teams on them . CDR | | | Re: Why is the Tornado so fast
[Re: grob]
#50438 06/06/05 10:51 AM 06/06/05 10:51 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 851 US Western Continental Shelf hobiegary
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Posts: 851 US Western Continental Shelf | My opinon is that Tornados can sometimes be faster than other 20' cats because of weight and width. Tornados are lighter than many other 20 footers and also wider than many.
GARY
Santa Monica Bay Mystere 6.0 "Whisk" <--- R.I.P. | | | Re: Tornado - fast
[Re: sail6000]
#50440 06/06/05 12:26 PM 06/06/05 12:26 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,906 Clermont, FL, USA David Ingram
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Posts: 3,906 Clermont, FL, USA | Well it would have to come from EU. It's my undestanding any Hobie Cat produced in the US has to have a comptip. Can you imagine a carbon mast with a plastic comptip... makes my head hurt just thinking about it. (joke)
Now if Hobie makes a carbon rocket oh say made in China, and delivers the boat all up for 19K... All other 20 footers are toast! If it's to be yet another 30k dollar multihull, I just don't see much demand, especially when the M20 and Eagle have been available for a couple of years now.
Dave
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: Tornado - fast
[Re: David Ingram]
#50441 06/06/05 12:54 PM 06/06/05 12:54 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 800 MI sail6000
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Posts: 800 MI | Hi Dave Didn,t realize the Marston or Eagle were 30 k --whew ! Wow -I,m gettin old ,-I remember{way back} buying my first then brand new state of the art H-18 for about 25 hundred -- The comp tip is a disaster ,-{another old sailing recollection}  --they need one of these little faces with a long grey beard on it  --After racing a Hobie 21 with 33 ft mast with comptip we were packing up ,---about half way down in lowering the mast the base slipped out and one of the crew tryed catching it ,--it was so heavy it broke his wrist ..-- Rather than China building it maybe just one of the smaller excellent build shops here ,---or perhaps some brilliant chemical engineer can develop C F or similar lightweight method of const. material that does not conduct electricity for H-US . Or best solution ,-import it just as the Tiger and market the new larger beam lightweight version FOX as a HT Formula 20 Class cat .Believe there is a set of rules outlined that the Morreli -Melvin design Ventilo model fits into among others . http://www.morrellimelvin.com/page29.html For 30 k catsailors might just as well go all out ,put a racing group of 3 or 4 togetherb--split costs ,-trade off as navigator helm and spin crew at events ,spend a little more and get the 33 footer . Mike at SAILMAX is attempting to put together several of these for next season . R-33 sailing video --realtime player --zztop music www.r33.com/video/R33.mpg
Last edited by sail6000; 06/06/05 01:52 PM.
| | | Re: Tornado - fast
[Re: sail6000]
#50442 06/06/05 01:34 PM 06/06/05 01:34 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | hope I,m not continueing rumor of a mythical new H-20 version Fox - A lightweight larger beam version may be exactly the modification the base design needs . Granted, we don't have much to go on - but my brief impression was that this 'experiemental' fox, whatever the configuration, is not a production model.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Tornado - fast
[Re: sail6000]
#50444 06/06/05 10:59 PM 06/06/05 10:59 PM |
Joined: Jun 2005 Posts: 122 Jimbo
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Posts: 122 | It's really all about the beam width. There are other boats with similar hulls, sail area and weight but lacking the T's beam width they are proportionately slower. The P19 is a perfect example. Hurricane 5.9 is another. The only negative aspect I,ve heard about the T from T sailing teams is the tendancy of the narrow knife like bows to dive into waves when overpowered with the added spin . CDR True, and this is one area where newer boats like the P19 have improved over the T's original design. Though a tiny bit shorter (P19 is actually 19' 3") the P19's hulls are much 'fatter' forward of the front beam than a T. They exhibit a high resistance to nose diving because of all that extra buoyancy in front where you need it. You have to make some big mistakes to get a P19 to dig in badly. I have sailed along for miles solo reaching with the tip of the lee bow a couple of inches under water without a care(I was too light to keep the boat balanced even hiked out with my toes on the transom). And the P19 is still a 'flat top' hull like the T. The really modern boats have elliptical cross-section hulls like a u-boat, so are happier than a seagull at a landfill sailing with a hull buried. But without that extra beam width, you just don't have the righting moment to keep the heel angle down to a reasonable amount, especially upwind, like a T can. So you never really get to take advantage of the sail power you have. Jimbo | | | Re: Tornado - fast
[Re: catman]
#50445 06/07/05 05:57 AM 06/07/05 05:57 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | Not a fan of it but, plastic comptip. I thought it was epoxy-glass lay up. Not to get too far off topic but I'm pretty sure it's a fiber (glass) reinforced plastic (not epoxy or a polyester variety).
Jake Kohl | | | Re: --your ideal 20 ft cat design and features?
[Re: grob]
#50446 06/07/05 08:17 AM 06/07/05 08:17 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 800 MI sail6000
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Posts: 800 MI | Hi Grob a follow -up question along the same lines on catamaran sailors ideal 20 ft cat -it's design and features sailors would like to see - Improvements from the standard benchmark Tornado design of a 20 ft cat may be a good place to start as the length and beam ratio seem close to ideal at 20 and 10 ft . Here are mine - Weight --as light as modern tech allows consistant with strength to race in surf and extreme conditions -- There are no standard stantlings for cat design loads -they vary with each designs various specifications . Sail Area --the trend towards larger flat top mainsails continues ,-this is good . Some design sails per the rating measurement proceedures which rates this type of high aspect sail configuration faster ,which is correct ,-but it is a shame to add sail area where it is less effective to meet a rating rule . Suggested a pure rating system for cats that uses only actual L B W SA measurements in a TEXEL type base power formula with a P handicap feature and same SIMILAR NUMBERS in P scale of relative time to distance traveled added to this basic pure design measurement number .--The only thing needed then would be top ranked T sailors of equal ability to spend a week or two switching boat types and racing each type to record comparative times, and we would all have a near perfect rating system . sorry --off topic - With the basics of L B W and SA established -that leaves specific features - SAILS -jib no jib --preference -small self tacking jib SPIN -higher aspect ratio -set further out on an extended pole -the longer luff dim .and higher angle is more efficient and creates more lift ,--via Aussie 18 type kites A mid pole snuffer or snail type spin retriever --and would like to see a winch handle type devise used in the spin system to ease ware on hands and increase ease and speed of sets and spin take downs . An internal type spin halyard system . Would like a reef system for the mainsail - Mast -CF LIGHTWEIGHT -in as areodynamic a section as possible --check out the current A Class cats --whew Hull shape --canted hulls --deeper bow sections --eliptical top decks forward . CROSSBEAM -radiused -higher off the water -in eliptical shape to avoid wave slap --the H-18 -designed in 77 is a good example - BOARDS - canted -type --would not mind for and aft boards to help balance the spin --the forward boards angled to assist lift w spin --semi foiler type . Rudders --larger -possibly a thru hull stern type design to help eliminate the cavitation problem .T foil shapes seem popular but have yet to sail with one . TRAMP --more open areas for racing in seas --more storage areas and areas thought out for tools flares-extra marine radio -food water etc along with hardware leads and placement options . Hardware --leads for control lines lead aft to stern trap crew positions -downhaul -rotator -etc Forward location for spin blocks -center main sheet - added cleats for temporary holding on spin sheet or others built in electronic compass location on spin-pole there are numerous other options -preferences and design aspects catsailors would like ,-sure I,ve not thought of numerous features and ideal options for a twenty footer -  --Carl
Last edited by sail6000; 06/07/05 08:26 AM.
| | | Re: Tornado - fast
[Re: sail6000]
#50447 06/07/05 09:09 AM 06/07/05 09:09 AM |
Joined: Jun 2005 Posts: 122 Jimbo
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Posts: 122 | ---or perhaps some brilliant chemical engineer can develop C F or similar lightweight method of const.
It's here already. It's called basalt fiber; ~80% of the strength/stiffness of carbon (e-glass has about 50%), electrically and thermally non-conductive and oh yeah, it costs only a little more than e-glass since they mine it rather than synthesize it like carbon fiber. Right now carbon is still sexy but some day soon some bright new company will figure it out. It's about the performance/cost, bang/buck however you want to slice it! If we go through another carbon fiber "shortage" ($$$) like back in the eighties, it will probably happen sooner rather than later. Jimbo | | |
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