| Re: hobie 18
[Re: pirate_tx]
#9144 08/01/02 09:12 PM 08/01/02 09:12 PM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 96 Racine, Wisconsin Leo
journeyman
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journeyman
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 96 Racine, Wisconsin | As far as I know, it's due to reduced whetted surface area.
I have read this many times that in light air, sit as far forward as possible (even have crew out on bow) to get the transom(s) out of the water and reduce whetted surface area (reduce drag).
Paul Scott Bartelt
2001 NACRA 6.0 NA #546
| | | Re: hobie 18
[Re: pirate_tx]
#9146 08/02/02 01:27 PM 08/02/02 01:27 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 1,459 Annapolis,MD Keith
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Posts: 1,459 Annapolis,MD | My 18 seems to require weight forward on all points of sail unless it is really blowing. If you can hear gurgling from the sterns, you're slow. Upwind, if the bows are not down you can't point, and the boat is slow. I have theories on why this is given the hull shape and all, but I'm probably wrong about it all.
This doesn't reduce wetted surface, in fact it seems to increase it as the leeward hull gets plenty pressed in, so until you can start to pull the windward hull out I think more boat is in the water, not less. Typical light to medium air configuration is for the crew to be on the lee bow, forward of the crossbeam, with the skipper sitting on the crossbeam close to the mast. This applies to all points of sail until the wind starts to pick up. My crew gives me a hard time for sending them to the bow, but they don't know how sore you get sitting on the crossbeam...
In addition, mast rake plays a part in this - in light to medium any mast rake makes the boat drag the stern even worse, and performance really dies off the wind. Therefore I only rake the mast if I know the winds are going to stay above 18-20. Even if the winds are that high at the start, if there's a good probability it will drop I won't rake - the loss in performance when the wind dies is too great.
| | | Re: hobie 18
[Re: shawn]
#9148 08/04/02 10:59 PM 08/04/02 10:59 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 1,459 Annapolis,MD Keith
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Posts: 1,459 Annapolis,MD | The most important thing is getting the sterns so that they are not dragging - it's like sailing with the brakes on, and the 18 seems to like dragging the sterns (at least mine does). Waterline length certainly is a consideration. But in this case, if the difference was between having the bows free of the water or not, I'd say the waterline length was the issue, but it's the difference between the bow being a third in the water or two-thirds in the water - same waterline, more of the hull in the water, butt not dragging... | | |
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