Ok I know i'll catch of a lot of it for this post but i'm curious to build a trimaran from a tornado hull and two nacra 18sq meter hulls. I'm currently sailing a fully restored '81 sqare which has the light hulls.. no foam core, just glass and longitudinal ribs for stiffness. I also have a tornado hull mold and thought the combo may make a decent tri. I was thinking of a 14-16 ft beam with the outter hulls canted and offset vertically about 2 ft...anyone have any thoughts on this one?
I rode a tri very similar to what you're proposing, a few years ago on Lake Minnetonka, MN. He was a budding naval architect, and custom built the center hull, either 20 or 22', quite low profile, very similar to a tornado design. He used 2 Nacra hulls, I'm not sure which ones. Round aluminum crossbeams, maybe 18' beam. The rig was from the Nacra, if I recall, and as such seemed a bit undersized, until we took it out. I was quite impressed, mostly with the whole different feel than the cats I've experienced. Very stable, not twitchy, accelerated easily, little heel (not sure I'd ultimately like a boat that didn't fly a hull) . It seemed deceptively fast, even with what I thought was an undersized rig. Only got that one ride, an hour in maybe 12 to 15 kts of wind, less than a 1' lake chop. I remember it well, I was intrigued. I think you should give it a go, and keep us posted.
Dave SC20 Flight Risk
Re: tornado/nacra trimaran
[Re: davefarmer]
#96075 01/14/0707:06 AM01/14/0707:06 AM
How about getting a Nacra 6.0 hull as mainhull? We justed switched beams between a 1989 Nacra 5.5.18 sq and a 1992 6.0. The 6.0 is now 3.3 m wide and the 5.5 down to 2.6 m.
Not sure about the non-sandwich 5.5 you have, but the later sandwich models have the same distance between front and rearbeam than the 6.0 making it a very easy operation as even the tramps did not need any modifications.
Regarding your trimaran project, the overall appearance of the tri would look much more harmonious than what you achieve with a tornado shaped mainhull.
Maybe you can find a damaged 6.0 hull so it would safe quite some money and time.
Carbon tubes could be a good idea to join the three hulls.
Can't really comment on the proposes angles and height differences. If you go with a 6.0 mainhull (and the distance between front and rearbeam is identical with the 18sq), would probably connect the three hulls with long aluminium tubes and go for a ride. This experience would probably give you a good feeling how much you want to cant the outside hulls.
Dirk
A-Cat GER 5
F-16 CHN 1 (sold)
SC 6.5 CHN 808
Re: tornado/nacra trimaran
[Re: rsubishop]
#96076 01/14/0710:08 AM01/14/0710:08 AM
If you have the cash, I'd do a foam core, carbon tornado main hull, (using your tornado mold) with a couple of Acat foam core carbon ama's. The whole package would be much lighter and stiffer than some old hulls. It would probably have better resale value as well.
Forte mast, he can make a pear shaped mast in sections and you could glue it together. He could ship it to you in two parts.
Forte carbon beams
Thats the way I'd go....
But I've been accused of having a carbon fetish.
Bill
Re: tornado/nacra trimaran
[Re: bvining]
#96077 01/14/0710:48 AM01/14/0710:48 AM
As long as theres a layer of kevlar in there somewhere, its perfectly fine to have such a disorder <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />
I agree with the A-hulls, but do not know where you will find a "carbon" main hull since the last time that I read the Tornado Rules and specs, I do not believe carbon hulls are allowed yet.
Tom Siders A-Cat USA-79 Tornado US775
Re: tornado/nacra trimaran
[Re: rsubishop]
#96079 01/15/0709:27 AM01/15/0709:27 AM
The main problem with what you are designing is the rudder controls, beam boxes, assembly time, and insurance. I saw a one off tri similar to what you are speaking in SF Bay in the late 1970s. It was a Sailcraft T hull with two 5.2 Nacra hulls. external beam boxes had to be adapted due to the experimental issue asd the fact that two boats were used. The rigging position became an issue [Tornado tapered non-sealed aluminum mast section] as well as holding the front of the 5.2 hulls in alignment. Heavy whisker stays helped with the alignment. The rudder controls kept breaking as well. The assembly time were excessive... anywhere from 3 hours to 5 hours. That's what stopped him from proceding with the development. He grew tired of spending so much time on the beach and not on the water. Also no insurance was to be had at that time... He eventually reassembled both boats.
thanks for everyones input.....so assuming i can handle all the design and building of the associated parts, hull alignment etc and the appearance of the different hull designs doesnt bother me, and I can get the sail area correct... how does everyone feel the performance would be? any other comments on my proposed vertical offset and canting of the amas? beam width?
oh and does anyone have or can tell me where to get a 3-D surface model for the nacra 5.5 hull and the tornado hull? I can handle most formats but would prefer a pro-e, mastercam x, or an iges file.
Re: tornado/nacra trimaran
[Re: rsubishop]
#96082 01/17/0710:52 AM01/17/0710:52 AM
Worse than building a catamaran of similar specification. If I am wrong, then I think we will see a number of A-Class trimarans.
The thing about trimarans is that you always have two hulls in the water and you have three hulls. Both of these factors will make the trimaran slower, I think.
Why Trimaran? Is there some other reason why you prefer the tri over the cat?
Bishop, I'm serious. Contact us. Sell us your Sq. We'll work out some hull trading or something. I'm working on building our local fleet and have some interest...
This sig would be something witty, but the censors are against that.
Worse than building a catamaran of similar specification. If I am wrong, then I think we will see a number of A-Class trimarans.
The thing about trimarans is that you always have two hulls in the water and you have three hulls. Both of these factors will make the trimaran slower, I think.
Why Trimaran? Is there some other reason why you prefer the tri over the cat?
I seem to recall that the designer's take on this is that if you want the overall best performance without worrying about cost, build a tri. If you want the best performance for a certain budget build a cat. This is in respect to the big class of boats.
Depending on the design of the tri, the main hull may not in the water, or in other designs may plane (Farrier), depending on conditions.
A-cats being restricted to a 7.5' beam would preclude any benefit from doing a tri.
the limit of your performance are the 5.5 hulls. the advantage of the tri versus the cat is the rightning moment. early tris were known for sinking the floats before they could fly the mainhull. perfect turtle machines. but only when you fly the mainhull free a tri would significantly profit from the increased rightning power.
modern tris like the 35ft division tris sailed on lake geneva have a very tiny mainhull and large floats.
if you want a fast boat, build large floats. unfortunately the 5.5 hulls cant carry much weight. i assume the performance of your tri with 6.0 floats would increase significantly.
Dirk
A-Cat GER 5
F-16 CHN 1 (sold)
SC 6.5 CHN 808
Re: tornado/nacra trimaran
[Re: Dirk]
#96087 01/18/0706:26 AM01/18/0706:26 AM
That's not actually a trimaran. It's a cat with a center stiffening pod to help stiffen up the rigging. From what I read of the design, the center pod is not intended to provide any flotation in the water.