| Re: Mr. Roberts RE: ARC-17
[Re: catsailorp19mx]
#27707 01/10/04 01:02 PM 01/10/04 01:02 PM |
Joined: Aug 2003 Posts: 284 S. Florida BRoberts
enthusiast
|
enthusiast
Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 284 S. Florida | Hi Dave, I will try to answer your questions on the ARC17. The ARC17 is the same boat, hulls, mast etc., as the SC17 with rigging upgrades. The boat is 8.5ft wide. PN adj = 0.995 It has a square top mainsail. PN adj = 0.980 The self tacking is smaller in area than the old SC17 jib. No PN adj. factor? Does a 1.005 factor apply? It has a spinnaker with launcher and retraction system. PN adj = 0/.960 This is the boat with all the bells and whistles. Therefore the adjusted PN = .960 x 0.98 x 0.995 x 0.73 = 0.68335 for two persons sailing the boat. For single handing add the 0.974 factor and the PN is 0.66558. Since the same boat is sold as a one person or two person boat, sailing it either way is well within class rules. As far as the difference in boat feel goes, there should be very little. The boats are the same width so the roll inertias are very similar and the quickness that the boats fly a hull will be very similar. Fore and aft the boats will feel similar because even though the 17 is shorter it has taller bows, which tend to restore the pitch inertia lost due to the shorter hulls. Also the 17 has clean, elliptical topsides, decks, that will split the water just as easy as the keel. Therefore you don't get the "slam on the brakes effect" when you drive the bow under. The boat recovers really sweetly. Look at the one picture of the SC20TR in the Steeple Chase Race in Cat Sailor. The leeward foredeck is underwater. Are the sailors in that picture diving for the rear beam? No, there is no problem and no reason for alarm on this hull design. The elliptical foredeck splits the water easily and this boat just keeps right on ripping. Another hull design would be doing a forward cartwheel in this same situation. Good Sailing, Bill | | | Re: Mr. Roberts RE: ARC-17
[Re: BRoberts]
#27709 01/18/04 10:15 PM 01/18/04 10:15 PM |
Joined: Jan 2004 Posts: 2 stingo
stranger
|
stranger
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 2 | Therefore the adjusted PN = .960 x 0.98 x 0.995 x 0.73 = 0.68335 for two persons sailing the boat. Bill, How was the DPN of 70.4, that was used at Tradewinds this weekend, arrived at? | | | Re: Mr. Roberts RE: ARC-17
[Re: stingo]
#27710 01/19/04 08:56 AM 01/19/04 08:56 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 1,911 South Florida & the Keys arbo06
Pooh-Bah
|
Pooh-Bah
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 1,911 South Florida & the Keys | Good question Stingo! I was sailing open class this weekend on my stock H-20 and got killed by the PN#. However, the course felt short and the wind was good, the ARC 17 may have not have been depowering as much as the H-20. The H-17'2 were also very fast upwind this weekend, many rounding A mark before the Arc, but then got clobbered down wind.
Eric Arbogast ARC 2101 Miami Yacht Club | | | ARC-17 rating. What's this ?
[Re: BRoberts]
#27711 01/19/04 06:55 PM 01/19/04 06:55 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
Carpal Tunnel
|
Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | I'm really sorry here but what happened at Tradewinds ?
First we calculated the rating of the Arc-17 at :
"adjusted PN = .960 x 0.98 x 0.995 x 0.73 = 0.68335 for two persons sailing the boat"
therefor = 68.3
(At one time I saw number like 66.5 fly past)
Than we sail the boat in the tradewinds off 70.2 ?
Whats up ?
Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | |
|
0 registered members (),
338
guests, and 39
spiders. | Key: Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod | | Forums26 Topics22,406 Posts267,062 Members8,150 | Most Online4,027 Jul 30th, 2025 | | |