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Re: rudder blues

To: "Dave Lindsey" <lindsey@xxxxxxxxxxx>,"karl Schulmeisters" <karlsch@xxxxxxxxxxx>, <BDally6107@xxxxxxx>,<mwhite@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, <swiftsolo@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: rudder blues
From: "Keith Deller" <kdap@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 08:14:31 -0600
References: <C2F0F40C.8132%lindsey@axionet.com>
Re: rudder bluesI second that name...good one Dave!
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dave Lindsey 
  To: karl Schulmeisters ; BDally6107@xxxxxxx ; mwhite@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ; 
swiftsolo@xxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Tuesday, August 21, 2007 8:57 PM
  Subject: Re: rudder blues


  Karl,

      If you do build a Swift. You shall call it "Salubrious Effects".

      Yep, I like that.

      When are you starting, ah.

      Dave L.



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  David E. Lindsey, C.O. 
  Lindsey Composites, Inc.
  Unit 211, 13308 - 76th Ave.
  Surrey, B.C.,
  V3W 2V9

  Phone (604) 970-2777
  Instant messaging-
  compositebrace@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Regular email with graphics-
  lindsey@xxxxxxxxxxx
  Home phone (604) 525-8494

------------------------------------------------------------------------------




    All good ideas.  The one thing I would add about the bear off - it helps if 
you start out sailing a bit loose (footing).  Then bear off only about 45-70 
degrees (ie to just past beam reach) and let the boat accelerate even more. 
Once the boat is up to scary speed, then bear off the rest of the way - or 
alternatively two-sail reach at 110 -120 degrees off the wind.  The two-stage 
bearoff has three salubrious (positive) effects:
     
    1)       it allows the boat to accelerate before the full downwind load is 
placed in the bow thus reducing the force pushing the bow down
    2)       a faster boat generates more lifting power out of the hull so it 
gives the bow shape more power to lift out of the water (buoyancy during the 
initial stage 1 bear off and planning lift during the latter bear off)
    3)       it reduces the loads on the rudder - by reducing the weather helm 
force of a buried lee-bow, you reduce the force on the rudder, plus since you 
are bearing off a bit less, you don't crank the rudder as hard over which in 
turn reduces the loads.
     
    The real gotcha is the puffs you were facing.  It sounds like you had 20kn 
steady with 15-20+kn gusts (that would explain the 20 degree shifts - velocity 
shifts).  Hammering gusts like these place maximum loads on EVERYTHING 
especially the mast.  In fact I'd take the time before the next sail to check 
everything on the mast "just in case"..
     
    Another thought on the rib.  Bram what do you thin of inlaying a ¼" or 3/8" 
carbon kite batten into the foam on both sides?  This isn't quite the full 
cross sectional rib, but it provides the surface stiffness.
     

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