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foils #168505
02/17/09 12:21 PM
02/17/09 12:21 PM
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pgp Offline OP
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Anyone care to offer a concise argument for/against foils?


Pete Pollard
Blade 702

'When you have a lot of things to do, it's best to get your nap out of the way first.

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Re: foils [Re: pgp] #168510
02/17/09 01:29 PM
02/17/09 01:29 PM
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Maryland
Kris Hathaway Offline
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Foils don't hurt as much as sabers (sabre EU)?

Really, how concise? Performance vs. convenience. Concise enough.


Kris Hathaway
Re: foils [Re: Kris Hathaway] #168512
02/17/09 01:56 PM
02/17/09 01:56 PM
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pgp Offline OP
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smile Different foil.

If foils improve performance, how? And under what wind conditions and sea states?

When I've tried to follow this subject in the past, clarity suffered almost from the beginning. As with all things F16, there is much angst.

Last edited by pgp; 02/17/09 01:58 PM.

Pete Pollard
Blade 702

'When you have a lot of things to do, it's best to get your nap out of the way first.

Re: foils [Re: pgp] #168522
02/17/09 02:38 PM
02/17/09 02:38 PM
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Hamburg
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Not sure if I understand your question, you are talking about lifting hydrofoils?
If yes, the pro is
less drag for fast vessels, because the drag due to lift of a foil dimishes with speed (1/v²), while the drag of a non lifting hull increases with speed (v²). Depending on weight and geometry there is a certain speed, above it, foils are a good, below it foils are bad. To achieve this speed you need enough wind and calm see state.
The main cons are impractical handling on beaches with banks and other obstacles and complexity.

At the end the question is: Do we need foils to have fun?

Cheers,

Klaus

Re: foils [Re: Smiths_Cat] #168532
02/17/09 03:24 PM
02/17/09 03:24 PM
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pgp Offline OP
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I'm not sure I understand my question! confused I'm wondering if foils added to the rudders of my Blade would reduce the "nose dive" under spin. . . and what are the trade-offs?


Pete Pollard
Blade 702

'When you have a lot of things to do, it's best to get your nap out of the way first.

Re: foils [Re: pgp] #168541
02/17/09 04:05 PM
02/17/09 04:05 PM
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Memphis, TN
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Andy Humphries Offline
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I think he is referring to bridle foils that enable you to lower the jib tack without stressing the hulls. The Nacra 6.0 had bridle foils and a huge jib. These are good things but the box rules may prohibit.

Re: foils [Re: Andy Humphries] #168544
02/17/09 04:15 PM
02/17/09 04:15 PM

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Scarecrow
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Pgp,

think of rudder foils like down force on an F1 car. On the car extra down force will make it easier to go around corners etc making the car quicker around the track, despite having cost you some top end speed.

T foils on your rudders will make it easier/safer to go down wind but this will be at the expence of top end speed both upwind and down due to increased drag.

Look at it like this.. The current top speed of your boat down wind is X, if you fit foils it will be reduced to 0.95X. However because of the risk of capsize you might only sail to 80% of the boat's possible top speed down wind at present and this could increase to 90% with the foils.

So some quick algebra suggests that at present your going 0.8X down wind but if you fit foils you'll be able to do 0.86X.

The real question is what are the actual percentages and is the gain down wind sufficient to make up for to loss upwind?

Re: foils [Re: ] #168548
02/17/09 04:34 PM
02/17/09 04:34 PM
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pgp Offline OP
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I had this crazy notion; put a t-foil on a bracket like an out board motor or just lift it like a dagger board.


Pete Pollard
Blade 702

'When you have a lot of things to do, it's best to get your nap out of the way first.

Re: foils [Re: pgp] #168563
02/17/09 06:32 PM
02/17/09 06:32 PM
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MERRITTISLAND, FL
Matt M Offline
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Originally Posted by pgp
I had this crazy notion; put a t-foil on a bracket like an out board motor or just lift it like a dagger board.


Pete,

That is the Stealth system. Foils and case done just like that. The only issue with installation would be getting angle correct. Misalignment of the T to the correct sailing plane will be very slow.

They do work to provide pitching resistance. Note canted daggers do the same thing. There is a slight use problem from a kick up standpoint but this is no more of a problem than the daggers.

MY opinion on foils: They try and hold the hull at a set orientation. This would be OK with me if that orientation worked in all conditions. In flat water we sail 1 way, but in rough conditions we may elect to try and run the nose up some to clear the waves. Now I have drag fighting me trying to keep it down. The other thing is that if the foils are working to keep the boat in a particular orientation, you may not be placing your crew weight correctly. It looks right but the foils are "working =drag" keeping the orientation. The other item which bothered me most was when they do let go it is catastrophic. In a big pitch there can be quite a bit of down force on the stern, when it lets go you are gone. It may save you sometimes but that feeling of almost saving it followed by cavitation just did not jive quite right.

M

Re: foils [Re: Matt M] #168564
02/17/09 06:35 PM
02/17/09 06:35 PM

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Scarecrow
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Scarecrow
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Originally Posted by Matt M
MY opinion on foils: They try and hold the hull at a set orientation. This would be OK with me if that orientation worked in all conditions. In flat water we sail 1 way, but in rough conditions we may elect to try and run the nose up some to clear the waves. Now I have drag fighting me trying to keep it down. The other thing is that if the foils are working to keep the boat in a particular orientation, you may not be placing your crew weight correctly. It looks right but the foils are "working =drag" keeping the orientation.


This is why I don't like them.

Last edited by Scarecrow; 02/17/09 06:35 PM.
Re: foils [Re: ] #168579
02/17/09 09:39 PM
02/17/09 09:39 PM
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pgp Offline OP
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". . .when they do let go it is catastrophic."

That's what I was afraid of.


Pete Pollard
Blade 702

'When you have a lot of things to do, it's best to get your nap out of the way first.

Re: foils [Re: pgp] #168584
02/18/09 03:15 AM
02/18/09 03:15 AM
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Originally Posted by pgp
". . .when they do let go it is catastrophic."

That's what I was afraid of.


THing is, in 2 years pf sailing my Stealth, in loads of wind at times, I have NEVER had them let go.


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Re: foils [Re: Andy Humphries] #168587
02/18/09 04:59 AM
02/18/09 04:59 AM
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North-West Europe
Wouter Offline
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Andy,

Quote

These are good things but the box rules may prohibit.



The F16 rules (as established in 2002) never rule on details like that. Such a thing would be fundamentally against the concept of the F16 class. We only rule on fundamental principles, never on specific details or implementations. For example, we have a rule on mast length or mast tipweight but don't rule in any way on how you satisfy these rules.

By extention the bridle foils are allowed as long as you use this feature to break some fundamental rule by fitting for example an oversized jib or whatever.

Wouter


Wouter Hijink
Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild)
The Netherlands
Re: foils [Re: scooby_simon] #168588
02/18/09 05:16 AM
02/18/09 05:16 AM
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Wouter Offline
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I agree with Simon and Matt here.

Getting the angle set up right is very important, but in racing with the T-foils I found their advantages to be very convincing.

Personally, I would love to have them on my Taipan F16, especially when singlehanding. The boat calms right down and you have bought yourself heaps of leeway with respect to diving on bear-aways, chop and reaching.

At the Global Challenge 2007 it would have improved my own results dramatically.

Of course nothing is without drawbacks, but that is not the point. Scarecrow also touches on this. The trick is to design them in such a way that the advantages outweight the disadvantages over a wide spectrum of conditions. So in some conditions you may face a drawback but in a disproportionally large remaining spectrum you get advantages, making you overall better.

Personally, I think (kick-up) T-foil rudders are a very good concept for novice and/or recreational F16 sailors. It makes the boat feel like a 20 footer in the dive sense while keeping all other aspects of a nimble lightweight 16 footer.

The best solution would be to have normal kick-up T-foil rudders where the T-foils can be unlocked to allow them to rotate freely. In the light stuff and when leaving/returning to the beach you just let them weathervane to whatever hull (or rudder) attitude you prefer and in the rough stuff you lock them down.

Wouter


Wouter Hijink
Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild)
The Netherlands
Re: foils [Re: Wouter] #168644
02/18/09 01:09 PM
02/18/09 01:09 PM
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pgp Offline OP
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Let me jump ahead for a moment.

In reference to the racing rules: If I have a system, permanently mounted to the boat, I can deploy it at will like the chute or dagger boards.

If I have an optional system, like sailing 1-up or 2-up, I must use it for the entirety of a regatta.

If that is true, I can mount a t-foil off the back of the rear cross bar and deploy it like the dagger boards. Up or down as I see fit?


Pete Pollard
Blade 702

'When you have a lot of things to do, it's best to get your nap out of the way first.

Re: foils [Re: pgp] #168688
02/18/09 06:54 PM
02/18/09 06:54 PM
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France
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Originally Posted by pgp
If that is true, I can mount a t-foil off the back of the rear cross bar and deploy it like the dagger boards. Up or down as I see fit?
From my reading of the rules all T-foils should be outlawed:

Rule 1.6 (Daggerboards and rudders), paragraph 4 (added by vote in 2007), point d:

"End fences/horizontal appendages below the waterline will not be allowed."

Here you go. The next Stealth with T-foils I'm racing against is going to be protested. Let's see how it goes smile

Re: foils [Re: pepin] #168692
02/18/09 06:59 PM
02/18/09 06:59 PM

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Scarecrow
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Read the full paragraph, that sentence only applies to dagger/centreboards, not rudders.

Pgp, I think your proposed foil would be considered a dagger board and therefore wouldn't be legal.

Re: foils [Re: ] #168696
02/18/09 07:25 PM
02/18/09 07:25 PM
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France
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Originally Posted by Scarecrow
Read the full paragraph, that sentence only applies to dagger/centreboards, not rudders.
I read the full paragraph. And I disagree with you, this could be interpreted as applying to both centerboard and dagger board.

Re: foils [Re: pepin] #168698
02/18/09 07:33 PM
02/18/09 07:33 PM
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Originally Posted by pepin
Originally Posted by Scarecrow
Read the full paragraph, that sentence only applies to dagger/centreboards, not rudders.
I read the full paragraph. And I disagree with you, this could be interpreted as applying to both centerboard and dagger board.


Full para is; wih my annotations

1.6.4 (Added by vote, August 2007) For the avoidance of doubt, daggerboards/centerboards will conform to the following :
a) Curved/’Banana’ boards will not be allowed.
b) Assymetrical cross-section profile boards will be allowed.
c) Fore/aft movement of the boards when in the down position will not be allowed.
d) End fences/horizontal appendages below the waterline will not be allowed. The board shall be capable of removal, without tools, via the upper opening of the case.
e) There will be no limitation on the daggerboard/centerboard length

Last edited by scooby_simon; 02/18/09 07:34 PM.

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Re: foils [Re: scooby_simon] #168701
02/18/09 08:16 PM
02/18/09 08:16 PM
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Northfield Mn
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Why hasn't somebody came up with an adjustable T-foil that can be changed on the fly?

A pivot point and a tube running through the rudder with threaded rod and a knob to change the angle.

Doesn't seem that complicated in my head. Biggest problem would be the weight.


Ooooh! or, a rudder that is two pieces. A front part and a back part that slip against each other, so the shape doesn't change too much. Dovetail them together in some fashion. Front half of the T-foil pivots on the front part of the rudder. Back mount of the T-foil slides on a pin on the moveable part of the rudder. Unless they were Aluminum they would probably be heave as well.

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