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Topic: Cirrus Icon Development Posted: 20 Jul 11 at 1:16pm |
And on those points:
I have jib cleats ready to fit if needed, but shall certainly be trying without to start with (I've already sailed Mike's like this several times)
I am using a slightly smaller, dagger style rudder on 004. Personally I find dagger rudders easier to raise and lower, as well as lighter to steer when partially raised.
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jeffers
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Posted: 20 Jul 11 at 3:10pm |
Originally posted by Peaky
And on those points: I have jib cleats ready to fit if needed, but shall certainly be trying without to start with (I've already sailed Mike's like this several times) I am using a slightly smaller, dagger style rudder on 004. Personally I find dagger rudders easier to raise and lower, as well as lighter to steer when partially raised. |
Also useful on shallow, small (and weedy) inland lakes (which i believe was one of the original target markets as this is where most inland sailing is done). If you can keep the rudder partially raised and still sail effectively then that is a massive bonus as you anly have to flick the plate to keep yourself clear...
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Paul
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D-Zero GBR 74
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giraffe
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Posted: 20 Jul 11 at 9:43pm |
It is not only the rudder. I would suggest that the Centreboard also looks much bigger than it needs to be if the boat is as fast as you are suggesting.
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giraffe
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Posted: 20 Jul 11 at 9:51pm |
When I say too big, I mean would a high aspect foil not be more effective?
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Posted: 20 Jul 11 at 10:19pm |
Funnily enough I was talking to a friend who sails a Scorpion this weekend and he thought the board was too small - as in not deep enough. But the Icon is not about out and out speed, it is a fast boat in a simple to use package and that includes not having ultra deep foils. Ultimate speed is compromised for better handling an a high average speed (less prone to stalling).
My NS daggerboard was very long and I doubt whether I could sail it at Chew at the moment as the water is quite low. But having said that, in my experience the Icon can out point most things, so I'm not sure how much extra would be gained by going deeper anyway.
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Jeremyc
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Posted: 21 Jul 11 at 10:17am |
I thought that the Icon was supposed to be a strict one design with all parts coming from the manufacturer? Is it already deviating from this ?
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N12- pure joy
D-Zero more pure joy
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blaze720
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Posted: 21 Jul 11 at 11:13am |
I thought that the Icon was supposed to be a strict
one design with all parts coming from the manufacturer? Is it already deviating
from this ?
Hi Jeremy
You are correct. But we have held back tooling for the foils for a while
and it is therefore still possible to modify the standard offering. In
summary virtually everything is a compromise in any boat - if we wanted even
more efficient foils we would have developed something along the NS14 dagger
board lines but a 6' dagger would have severely limited the user location
possibilities, have been a right pain for the crew and been a great weed cutter
(or not !). The projected length of the currently used centreboard is
approximately 1030mm below the hull and given Icon's relative size is quite
reasonable - ie about the projected length of an RS400, Blaze, Phantom etc.
The pivot point is intentionally high in the case so that even a slight change
from vertical moves the centre of effort backwards in a slightly exaggerated
manner relative to the rake angle. The reasoning is that as wind speed
increases and windward planing is possible it helps to move crew weight and the
centre of effort back a tad but you can do this with less actual centre-board
rake being required. This has come about because the pre-production
boats have TWO pivot positions that are about 6cm apart (fore/aft) and what is
best in light winds is not the same for when it blows - the higher pivot point
now used can give you some of the best of both worlds with just one pivot
position - ie to enhance all round performance in all winds.
However well grounded or not this 'theory' is ... in the real world of comparative
testing/racing the new boat set-up works and Icon goes well in both light winds
and decent breeze.
The point is that the centreboard may appear to be larger than is optimal to
some but what you have to know is how much is actually in the water when fully
down ! .... and it is a fair bit less than you might imagine. As I’ve said previously Icon is plenty quick
but not necessarily exceptional … but is
does have a much better average speed around the course
than a great many classes. We have worked
hard to optimize this aspect across a range of typical conditions and have not
sought to optimize performance in any one condition. No
point being stunning in a F5 and then being sluggish in light winds or ‘hesitating’
in the inevitable lulls between the
puffs.
The other point about the rudder is straightforward enough - the boat is rather
well 'balanced' and does not need, imo, the size of the current one on
03. The helm is light and precise and we have never felt it 'under'
sized. We have a smaller, slimmer, pivoting alternative anyway and Peaky
is also trying out a vertical ‘cassette’ one directly off an NS14 again with a
smaller foil. Whatever is ultimately selected in the next few weeks
it will be 'standard' but it is far better to go through this (possibly long-winded)
comprehensive and very thorough pre-production testing process than rush into
full production. We and our customers would then have to 'live with
the consequences' perhaps for years .... we've all seen that happen before
...
Mike L.
Edited by blaze720 - 22 Jul 11 at 11:26am
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Posted: 28 Jul 11 at 11:03pm |
A couple of photo's from last night of 'Incognito':
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Posted: 28 Jul 11 at 11:04pm |
Looking forward to the maiden voyage on Sunday, the forecast looks perfect!
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blaze720
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Posted: 29 Jul 11 at 1:09pm |
Hi Peaky
.... at last ! Good luck and we look forward to knowing the boats name
and getting your feedback. BTW we are working now with a rake
measurement of 7120mm to the top of the transom gudgeon fitting on 03.
Might take a bit more rake to good effect but that is what '03' is running
currently. You will need to run with a bit of kicker and very
little Cunningham in lighter stuff. Pull kicker on until the crease
running from gooseneck area to highest 'semi' batten disappears.
We are also now testing with the smaller pivoting rudder blade and it is much preferred
so it does not look like Icon will now share the same blade as the Blaze.
Any feedback on the NS dagger one will be very useful as I've not used
them since the concept boat last year - the smaller pivoting one is about the
same size as your NS dagger one.
I've also just fitted 'opposing' jib sheet cleats just behind the
shrouds. Gives crew additional option and makes single-handing more
practical. Last Sunday crew was not available so single-handed again with
cleat - ah bliss. Not fully competitive upwind losing out to Phantoms and
Blazes when well overpowered but really rather fast offwind. Roughly as
fast around the course overall as these classes but would have been quicker
with crew.
BSC penalise 2 man boats that are sailed single a further 40 points on their
'regular' PNs so had to race off 960 ! (off our already punitive '1000'
experimental PN) So not really handicap competitive. However the point is
that it was very manageable in conditions that were causing a fair few capsizes
in the general fleet and had a lot of laughs along the way - so really a bit of
a pussy cat in practice despite inherent pace. Nearly 'knocked' off my
perch by conditions only one in a couple of hours racing.
Mike L.
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