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Debunking Dodgy Sailing Theories |
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RS400atC
Really should get out more Joined: 04 Dec 08 Online Status: Offline Posts: 3011 |
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Topic: Debunking Dodgy Sailing Theories Posted: 10 Nov 11 at 8:54pm |
We're avoiding the issue of saying how flat we mean by flat.
I haven't measured it, but I would guess I'm talking about 8% depth being about what seems to work, looking at the lowest batten on a 400 main. That's for a beat when not only is the crew sat to leeward, but the helm is sat forward and as leeward as possible. Sometimes of course, you can avoid beating because light winds will 'always' shift, and it's better to be moving than pointing...... |
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Chris 249
Really should get out more Joined: 10 May 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2041 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 14 Nov 11 at 10:33am |
"I begrudginly tried in in a drifter and it worked"
Ummm, a lot of people in some classes have tried the tight outhaul in drifters and found that it worked for them, too. And they are certainly not all skiffies; even in 1989 IOR 50s some America's Cup winners had the outhaul tight all the time. Certainly it doesn't work in all craft and no one who has read the stuff I write would pretend that I feel that skiffs are any better than any other boat, but have you any evidence (ie skiff worlds victories as well as the 505 ones I presume you have) that you are right and they are wrong? For what it's worth, I was surprised when I saw the tight-outhaul theory in action too, but the information I got was that generating more power from increasing camber in the lower part of the mainsail was not as effective as losing efficiency in that area in exchange for being able to sheet more tightly. Trying to sheet tightly with a deep mainsail foot just lead to a stalled slot (to use that term loosely). Of course easing the outhaul works in most boats, but surely there is one hell of a jump from you finding that it didn't work in your boat, to saying that everyone who uses a tight outhaul in any class is getting it wrong? I know in one class I sail, the fast high-wind settings for camber in the top 1/3 of the sail is (at a guess) about 6%, in another it may be 5%, whereas in another class it's negative camber, with the top battens inverting. If upper camber can vary so much in a breeze depending on class, why not lower camber?
Edited by Chris 249 - 14 Nov 11 at 10:46am |
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JimC
Really should get out more Joined: 17 May 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 6649 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 14 Nov 11 at 10:47am |
The trouble is because sails vary so much in design and shape, and because one thing affects another its difficult to be too dogmatic... You may find setting one aspect of the shape right according to theory sets another aspect comprehensively wrong and its just a question of seeking the best compromise.
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furtive
Posting king Joined: 30 Mar 05 Online Status: Offline Posts: 188 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 14 Nov 11 at 11:08am |
And all this assumes that what works for one sailor/team will work for another. Just because one setting/sail shape/mode of sailing/etc. is (supposedly) theoretically faster, and indeed faster for a particular sailor, it doesn't necessarily mean that all the other sailors in that fleet, with their enormous ranges of skill, experience, technique, fitness, strength, weight, tactical awareness, etc, etc, will automatically go faster by aiming for (and quite possibly not achieving) the same set up. Or indeed that a completely different set up can be argued as being theoretically (and actually) faster. Isn't that one of the sport's most attractive features? There are many many ways to skin the many cats involved.
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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: 14 Nov 11 at 11:16am |
Who'd have thought one throwaway line would cause such upset...
I'm sure it works for many cuts of sail, but I've seen many boats going nowhere at all with outhaul bar tight having read in a book that it needs to be tight in a drifter. People actually need to question ALL the statements made in books and articles about what makes a boat go fast, and use them as a starting point. Sadly, many take what is written as gospel and follow it blindly.
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Firefly 2324, Puffin 229, Minisail 3446 Mirror 70686
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dics
Far too distracted from work Joined: 05 Oct 05 Online Status: Offline Posts: 317 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 14 Nov 11 at 1:27pm |
Windward heel. How does it is work? Or is it a myth? |
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Contender443
Really should get out more Joined: 01 Oct 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 1211 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 14 Nov 11 at 2:04pm |
Next time you are out don't hike too hard and heel the boat to leeward and the boat will turn into the wind. Now ease the sheet and have some windward heel and the boat will now bear away.
So this is not a theory it is a fact.
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Bonnie Lass Contender 1764
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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: 14 Nov 11 at 3:07pm |
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Firefly 2324, Puffin 229, Minisail 3446 Mirror 70686
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dics
Far too distracted from work Joined: 05 Oct 05 Online Status: Offline Posts: 317 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 14 Nov 11 at 3:47pm |
Yep.
Windward heel sailing upwind to the windward mark. I do it and I get get lifted up nicely. No-one else seems to do it at the club. Whenever I have been out with the Tasers they have shunned the idea prefering to keep the boat "flat" (in taser terms means 30 degrees to leeward it seems!!). So I thought why does it work? How do the foils give you the lift? How does the hull shape affect it? Also it seems half the people I talk to say it works and others say it does not (but they seem to be the people who can not do it).
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Contender443
Really should get out more Joined: 01 Oct 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 1211 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 14 Nov 11 at 4:48pm |
I think we are talking more about balance here. What you think of as flat is usually a slight heel to leeward and windward heel to you is probably flat.
If your rudder is set up properly then a flat boat will give neutral helm and therefore no drag.
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Bonnie Lass Contender 1764
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