| Re: Spinnaker boat, lee helm
[Re: Rhino1302]
#148714 07/07/08 10:39 AM 07/07/08 10:39 AM |
Joined: Oct 2005 Posts: 1,152 tampa, fl ksurfer2
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Posts: 1,152 tampa, fl | Factory kite boats may drive much differently than a boat with a kite added. I had a N6.0 with a kite. There was quite a bit of lee helm with the kite up, on my N20, the boat is perfectly balanced.
If your havin girl problems i feel bad for you son I got 99 problems but my beautiful wife ain't one | | | Re: Spinnaker boat, lee helm
[Re: Rhino1302]
#148716 07/07/08 10:49 AM 07/07/08 10:49 AM |
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Posts: 1,152 tampa, fl | It is most likely many factors combined. The N20 was designed from the very beginning with a spin in mind. The balance is probably a combination of sail area distribution (large main, small jib), dagger board location and aspect ratio, spin size, pole lenght etc. I am no expert, only speculating.
If your havin girl problems i feel bad for you son I got 99 problems but my beautiful wife ain't one | | | Re: Spinnaker boat, lee helm
[Re: Rhino1302]
#148718 07/07/08 11:35 AM 07/07/08 11:35 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | But what is it about an N20 that allows it to be balanced downwind? Is it that the pole length and the kite foot length were better chosen? I believe most of it (or lack thereof) has to do with the rake of the rudders and getting them very nearly balanced on their lift with the pivot point. If they're balanced, you won't feel any helm either way - I tune mine for a touch of weather helm upwind and it usually works out to a little lee helm downwind (even on the 20).
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Spinnaker boat, lee helm
[Re: Rhino1302]
#148720 07/07/08 11:51 AM 07/07/08 11:51 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | But the rake of the rudders doesn't balance the helm, just makes it feel like its balanced, right? True - but compared to the alternative of moving the daggerboard trunks.... No catamaran is balanced so there is no load on the rudders - all rudders carry a bit of the side loading. The I20 carries a tremendous load on the rudders and you can stall them by sheeting the main too quickly after gusts and before the water flow over the foils is at a peak. I've seen plenty of rudders break just from the typical sailing side loads incurred on a 20 yet it feels balanced. I don't know how much load is good load, but the rudders really do carry a lot more than you would think.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Spinnaker boat, lee helm
[Re: Rhino1302]
#148721 07/07/08 12:01 PM 07/07/08 12:01 PM |
Joined: Nov 2005 Posts: 1,203 uk TEAMVMG
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Posts: 1,203 uk | Are you leaving the main traveller central? Coming from a 2 sail boat, you will be used to dumping a large amount of main traveller for downwind. F18s and 20s will go around the course with the traveller in the same place [except in light winds].
Paul
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| | | Re: Spinnaker boat, lee helm
[Re: TEAMVMG]
#148723 07/07/08 12:09 PM 07/07/08 12:09 PM |
Joined: Jun 2006 Posts: 308 Reno NV Rhino1302 OP
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Posts: 308 Reno NV | Are you leaving the main traveller central? Coming from a 2 sail boat, you will be used to dumping a large amount of main traveller for downwind. F18s and 20s will go around the course with the traveller in the same place [except in light winds]. I was trying to keep the telltales on the main flowing, which usually meant traveling out about a foot. I won the regatta against boats I used to sail even with the first time with the new rig, so I don't think I was terribly slow. I still would have won with an F18 Portsmouth number, and would have tied for 2nd with an I20 Portsmouth number. | | | Re: Spinnaker boat, lee helm
[Re: Rhino1302]
#148724 07/07/08 12:35 PM 07/07/08 12:35 PM |
Joined: May 2002 Posts: 1,037 Central California ejpoulsen
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Posts: 1,037 Central California | Congrats and hope Klamath was fun!
Some lee helm may be "normal" simply because you're hoisting a huge amount of sail in front of the center of resistance.
You could try a little more mast rake. But you'll probably find that there's a balance between weather helm upwind and lee helm downwind.
Eric Poulsen A-class USA 203 Ultimate 20 Central California
| | | Re: Spinnaker boat, lee helm
[Re: Rhino1302]
#148725 07/07/08 12:51 PM 07/07/08 12:51 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | Ah, that makes a lot of sense. So one solution to my problem might be to rake my rig back and then re-balance the ruders.
Do you think the N20 rudders would be more or less likely to stall when highly loaded than the older Nacra rudder design? The new 20 rudders are definitely less likely to stall - the old pin-style rudders were very prone to stalling. I wouldn't change your rudders or the rake in the mast for whatever wind strength you were sailing in - there's nothing wrong with them and I wouldn't say there's anything wrong with the lee helm you are experiencing. You did win, afterall. I would rake your rudders more forward to try and balance them a little more if the lee helm is uncomfortable. Certainly too much lee helm can make sailing fast difficult just from the pull on the tiller. You may have to grind a little on the rudder itself to get enough clearance for additional rake.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Spinnaker boat, lee helm
[Re: ejpoulsen]
#148726 07/07/08 12:57 PM 07/07/08 12:57 PM |
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Posts: 308 Reno NV | Congrats and hope Klamath was fun!
Some lee helm may be "normal" simply because you're hoisting a huge amount of sail in front of the center of resistance.
You could try a little more mast rake. But you'll probably find that there's a balance between weather helm upwind and lee helm downwind. Thanks! Klamath was lots of fun, and for whatever reason the new rig worked perfectly. I thought we'd have lots of tweaking to do and lots of "we're going to die" moments. But actually with the self-tacker and the SNU snuffer it is very easy to sail. The boat doesn't quite go upwind like it used to, so a little more rake might pay off there as well. | | | Re: Spinnaker boat, lee helm
[Re: Jake]
#148727 07/07/08 01:05 PM 07/07/08 01:05 PM |
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Posts: 308 Reno NV | ...You may have to grind a little on the rudder itself to get enough clearance for additional rake... Yup, I'm fully raked on the rudders right now, so I'll have to grind to get more. I've been thinking of upgrading to the N20 rudders for next year - my current rudders are getting to be more patch than original anyway. | | | Re: Spinnaker boat, lee helm
[Re: Rhino1302]
#148731 07/08/08 10:02 AM 07/08/08 10:02 AM |
Joined: May 2002 Posts: 1,037 Central California ejpoulsen
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Posts: 1,037 Central California | I certainly agree that you don't want your rudders to be too small! Otherwise you can literally spin out. My 5.0 rudders did not look bigger than the 5.8 rudders, but I could be wrong about that.
Rhino, as you know, the name of the game is to keep it wild the whole way downwind; the daggerboards are crucial to popping up the hull; how much the board should be down varies. My boat has much smaller boards than yours, and I only start pulling them up when it's above about 12kts.
Eric Poulsen A-class USA 203 Ultimate 20 Central California
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