He needs to upgrade first ...Waiting for a comment from @Mikerb to this thread. Maybe he is actually racing in it ?
He needs to upgrade first ...Waiting for a comment from @Mikerb to this thread. Maybe he is actually racing in it ?
Because they sail at an angle to the wind. They use the force from the wind on a huge sail and a very low friction hull and away they go. When I used to windsurf in the 1970's I frequently went faster than the wind. And that was old tech!How they get up to 49.1 knots boat speed from just 12 knots of breeze is beyond me!
I have heard similar explanations but my engineering mind keeps betraying me. Say I was pushing you sitting on your coasting bike on level ground and I was walking at 5 kph, how could you be travelling at 20 kph? And if I was walking at a 45 degree angle off to your side, surely your travel speed would be negated to less than my pushing speed.Because they sail at an angle to the wind. They use the force from the wind on a huge sail and a very low friction hull and away they go. When I used to windsurf in the 1970's I frequently went faster than the wind. And that was old tech!
gramps all to do with angle of attack, windspeed and size of sail andI have heard similar explanations but my engineering mind keeps betraying me. Say I was pushing you sitting on your coasting bike on level ground and I was walking at 5 kph, how could you be travelling at 20 kph? And if I was walking at a 45 degree angle off to your side, surely your travel speed would be negated to less than my pushing speed.
I know I know, don’t answer my silly ‘off the cuff’ hypothesis. It just makes me laugh that the unique physics of sailing allows sailboats to even travel UPWIND (aided by tacking manoeuvres). ?
Yep. Point on point loading is quite different from the dynamics of sail area - and pressure differentials generated by the aerofoil shapes of sails.gramps all to do with angle of attack, windspeed and size of sail and
friction
say you had a 5mph wind a sail on the bike which harnesses the wind
and the sail was 5m in area this would generate quite a large force
especially if the angle of the sail was perfect to the wind and i would
have thought it would propel you faster than 5mph
OK.........these craft are impressive but for me once you completely lose contact with the water it is something very different to sailing. Foiling has become quite popular with windsurfers but the same thing applies and outside of the pros I can get planing at just a bout the same low wind threshold as most of the foilers. In terms of speed, guys on slalom kit ( something I left behind a few years back) regularly hit speeds in excess of 30knots. Even on the freeride kit I use now it is relatively normal to hit max speeds of c 25kts with a 6.5m sail.Waiting for a comment from @Mikerb to this thread. Maybe he is actually racing in it ?
View attachment 47621
The video below explains what's so different about these boats... the dynamics which requires the crew to master operating these speed rockets at the very verge of a peculiar if not spectacular 'racers edge.'
(Hope you can view this one @Zimmerframe )
I think it's just an optical illusion between the two sails from the angle of the screen capture. The video shows the entire movement.Any idea what's going on with the leech in that first image?
Leech – The aft (back) edge of a fore-and-aft sail is called the leech (also spelled leach). The leech is either side edge of a symmetrical sail—triangular or square.
A different way to think about it is a weight hanging from the middle of a rope stretched across a wide gap. The shallower the angle of the rope, the larger the tension in the rope.I have heard similar explanations but my engineering mind keeps betraying me. Say I was pushing you sitting on your coasting bike on level ground and I was walking at 5 kph, how could you be travelling at 20 kph? And if I was walking at a 45 degree angle off to your side, surely your travel speed would be negated to less than my pushing speed.
I know I know, don’t answer my silly ‘off the cuff’ hypothesis. It just makes me laugh that the unique physics of sailing allows sailboats to even travel UPWIND (aided by tacking manoeuvres). ?
back in the 90s i had a Fanatic Cat race board all carbon a big big skeg and a huge dagger board this linked up with a (at that time)Tushingham camber induced sail got you as close to the wind as you could get and tacking very fast, Fanatic improved the board withA different way to think about it is a weight hanging from the middle of a rope stretched across a wide gap. The shallower the angle of the rope, the larger the tension in the rope.
Incidentally, using the same principle is how trees can be ripped from the ground by man power alone. In that case, the tree is one of the anchor points, the other anchor point is something that is NOT going to move. The weight in the middle of the rope is replaced by people pulling. The shallow angle of the ropes increases the tension in them and rips the tree from the ground.
PS: Obviously the sailboat cannot sail directly into the wind. When I was learning how to do it, at first I was so slow in the tacking manoeuvre that in stronger winds, any headway I gained was lost while I was changing tack.
I was a sailboard fanatic from the first time I saw one in Oct'77 at my local lake. I signed up for lessons, rented a wetsuit and away I went. I bought the Sea Panther in Oct'78 and I used it three times per week on club races, local competitions, holidays etc. The only thing that stopped me was dead calm, but even then I practiced my swan flapping! Then in 1986 I got ill and that was the end of that. It was one of those childhood diseases that kids shrug off but have a devastating impact upon adults. Five years later, when I had fully recovered, I didn't want to do it anymore. The board and all its kit has been in my garage since early '86. I don't fit the wetsuit anymore!back in the 90s i had a Fanatic Cat race board all carbon a big big skeg and a huge dagger board this linked up with a (at that time)Tushingham camber induced sail got you as close to the wind as you could get and tacking very fast, Fanatic improved the board with
the Cat 2 which could rail a lot better
don`t tell me Rother Valley?I was a sailboard fanatic from the first time I saw one in Oct'77 at my local lake. I signed up for lessons, rented a wetsuit and away I went. I bought the Sea Panther in Oct'78 and I used it three times per week on club races, local competitions, holidays etc. The only thing that stopped me was dead calm, but even then I practiced my swan flapping! Then in 1986 I got ill and that was the end of that. It was one of those childhood diseases that kids shrug off but have a devastating impact upon adults. Five years later, when I had fully recovered, I didn't want to do it anymore. The board and all its kit has been in my garage since early '86. I don't fit the wetsuit anymore!
I had another go at sailboarding when in the Caribbean in 2006, but although I knew what to do, my body couldn't deliver! The local instructor/boat driver/whatever told me that "I could tell that you used to know what you were doing"
I very much suppose that my Sea Panther is now a museum piece. But it's in good nick and it seems a shame to take it to the tip. I wonder if a local club might take it for training purposes? Hmm, that has set me thinking.....
No, I learned at Ferry Meadows Country Park in Peterborough. It was a 70 acre lake, so even in the fiercest winds you never got really big waves. According to the anemometer on the clubhouse roof I went out once in wind speed of 63knots. I had borrowed a 2.6m2 storm sail. and I had fitted my home made storm dagger-board. I launched in the wind shadow of the clubhouse and then holy hell was unleashed. I shot to the end of the lake at warp speed and then had to be rescued. The wind was just too strong for me to turn and tack. I got a big thumbs up from the club captain though! I've got some photos somewhere, not digital though.don`t tell me Rother Valley?
was terrible for shadows, wind wasn`t constant at all
nice anecdoteNo, I learned at Ferry Meadows Country Park in Peterborough. It was a 70 acre lake, so even in the fiercest winds you never got really big waves. According to the anemometer on the clubhouse roof I went out once in wind speed of 63knots. I had borrowed a 2.6m2 storm sail. and I had fitted my home made storm dagger-board. I launched in the wind shadow of the clubhouse and then holy hell was unleashed. I shot to the end of the lake at warp speed and then had to be rescued. The wind was just too strong for me to turn and tack. I got a big thumbs up from the club captain though! I've got some photos somewhere, not digital though.
then water starting damaged the back, and by by to windsurfing.to think about it we were all as mad as these guysnice anecdote
we always liked when we could (due to wife ex, kids at that time) get to south shore at Brid.
this one day four of us sailed in a force 4 cross off with varying degrees of difficulty trying to
get back to shore, 1 plonker put up a 6m on a long board and nearly the last i saw of him was
heading towards Sweden at about 30mph.private boat had to get him. good days
Neoprene is well known for shrinking ... so don't worry about that ...The board and all its kit has been in my garage since early '86. I don't fit the wetsuit anymore!
mind boggling the stresses that must be on those er er flippersWhen I first saw the CGI proposal years ago I thought the concept was too weird. Didn’t pay too much attention about it until now.
It’s a huge commitment to build something like that at great cost - just straight out of CAD simulations. Not surprised only a few teams went for it, but I was sceptical too.
Now if only the crew can lay off the baked beans!
At risk of sounding political .. each time they lift from the water .. shall we call them a brexit ?mind boggling the stresses that must be on those er er flippers
think Robs bike should be ok then
only if your network signal is still blocked and you can`t viewAt risk of sounding political .. each time they lift from the water .. shall we call them a brexit ?
Imagine if those foils were actually made in China? ?mind boggling the stresses that must be on those er er flippers
think Robs bike should be ok then
How about I push it even further and call it VirtueXenoHydroPhobia? ?At risk of sounding political .. each time they lift from the water .. shall we call them a brexit ?
what the f..ks that ? water up the assImagine if those foils were actually made in China? ?
How about I push it even further and call it VirtueXenoHydroPhobia? ?
No, Alien (Xeno) water (Hydro) up the arse (Phobia), in church! (Virtue)what the f..ks that ? water up the ass
You can't say that .. this is a public , @Christian , forum ...No Alien (Xeno) water (Hydro) up the arse (Phobia), in church! (Virtue)
With you around Zimbo, I’m surprised it’s taken this long ??I'm pretty sure in the game of forum that @GrandPaBrogan wouldn't have expected Yacht - would become arse in only 58 moves.
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