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Is sailing a dinghy like flying a plane? |
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2547
Really should get out more Joined: 11 Aug 11 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1151 |
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Topic: Is sailing a dinghy like flying a plane? Posted: 07 Jan 12 at 2:39pm |
Following on from comments on another topic it struck me that sailing is perhaps as complex as flying.
You have to control your speed/lift by adjusting aerofoils, you steer with a rudder and the interation of the air over the lift/drive foils ...
You could argue that sailing is more complex as you also have a set of foils in a fluid to deal with plus you have a aysumetric loading on your craft requiing you to have to balance against the foils.
Of course flying you have all the air traffic control stiff but the phisical action of "driving" the plane (or perhaps glider) isn't dissimilar to flying.
If you want to go flying then you accept it is complex and you take lessons, plus of course the obvious downsides of getting it wrong.
With sailing if you crash you just get wet so we don't need the same training and certification but in terms of learning to "drive" a dinghy is it similar to learning to fly?
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Rupert
Really should get out more Joined: 11 Aug 04 Location: Whitefriars sc Online Status: Offline Posts: 8956 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 07 Jan 12 at 3:41pm |
More like gliding, maybe, seeing as the power source is the air? Never flown, though, so don't really know!
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Firefly 2324, Puffin 229, Minisail 3446 Mirror 70686
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craiggo
Really should get out more Joined: 01 Apr 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 1810 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 07 Jan 12 at 5:10pm |
Having held a glider pilots license and had a years pilot training in the RAF, I can confirm that there are a few similarities.
Like sailing, flying is best when you are able to keep your eyes out of the cockpit. Certainly the physics of flight and sailing are based on the same underlying principles of fluid dynamics, so I guess you'd expect some similarities. I'd say that sailing a fast assymetric spinnaker boat downwind is probably the closest sensation to flying, in that you have to respond to the gusts and keep the boat balanced and upright while trading direction. In an aircraft you'll be adjusting incidence to maintain speed, and power to maintain height. As you say the impact of getting it wrong in an aircraft is a bit more severe!!!! |
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2547
Really should get out more Joined: 11 Aug 11 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1151 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 07 Jan 12 at 6:14pm |
I guess my point is that both are quite complex craft to master and as such can't really be compared to snow sports or riding a bike in terms to difficulty to master ...
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Stargazey
Groupie Joined: 15 May 10 Online Status: Offline Posts: 45 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 07 Jan 12 at 7:41pm |
I've rarely taken a parachute with me on a dinghy.
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2547
Really should get out more Joined: 11 Aug 11 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1151 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 07 Jan 12 at 8:19pm |
Do you always take one on a plane? That's not the point anyway ... it's about the relative complexity. I'm suggesting sailing a dinghy is more like flying a glider (or plane) than riding a bike ...
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Max McCarthy
Posting king Joined: 30 Oct 11 Location: West Midlands Online Status: Offline Posts: 104 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 07 Jan 12 at 11:02pm |
The actual act of flying a plane is pretty easy (I have had flight lessons), but I suppose a boat sailing is pretty similar, with all the controls, and the actual complications all added on, like when flying properly with all the extra complications would probably be pretty similar to flying. Apart from if you make a mistake when flying you can die in many more situations then in sailing.
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Vintage skol moth 3438
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r2d2
Far too distracted from work Joined: 29 Sep 11 Online Status: Offline Posts: 350 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 07 Jan 12 at 11:08pm |
At a "taster" gliding session I was told that there is a lot of crossover between sailing and gliding, and that many of the gliding club members were also sailors with a love for the dynamics of the wind etc
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