Hi Guys
This thread is on points that pop up every so often and then fade away again for another period, unfortunately. This is the problem that confronts every amateur experimenter. Just how do you evaluate your efforts?
When Joddy Chapman took this to an academic level he ended up studying measurement systems rather than junk rigs and the net result was that we in the junk world were little wiser at the end of the process. In theory a wind tunnel would be useful, but in practice they only seem to give results for steady state conditions and my experience of sailing is anything but steady state. It’s fine for aircraft and cars, where wind direction can be measured in fractions of a degree, but with boats alpha can vary by many degrees in a second and then be back where it started a second later. A high performance section with a ‘bucket’ lift/ drag curve may be ideal for a glider, but would be a total disaster on a boat. Therefore, apart from cost, wind tunnels would be of little use for our purposes.
The idea of using models is attractive, and I am looking in that direction myself. Even with the most excellent model I have I can only see problems and have not rushed ahead as I realise I cannot scale a rig accurately enough to prove anything.
Arne is right is saying that it is not just lift that we have to maximise, but we have to maximise the lift/ drag ratio so that minimising of the drag is just as important. If he does improve his windward performance by improving his keel it will still make no difference to the L/D of the rig, but he will annoy the pointy headed brigade a little more.
Whichever way I look at this problem, I always arrive at the same conclusion. The only way to evaluate rig modifications is the America’s Cup way. Rig two identical boats and race them against each other, and making only one modification at a time. All we need is megabucks, infinite time and infinite patience. If we haven’t a ready supply of these then we have to find the next best thing, and again the answer requires identical hulls of a size that will not be effected by crew weight and position during testing. When I started playing with Poppy this was still impractical, so I had to settle with handicap racing, and the Round the Island Race was the cheapest way to get the best return. Unfortunately we all know that handicapping is a remarkably inexact science, and in the RTI the system used is quite crude. Some classes of boat regularly win, and some (Westerly, for example) never win. This is not sour grapes, as I have learned all I wanted from the exercise, but it has not obtained the publicity for the junk rig movement that I would have liked.
Edward and I have had numerous discussions on this, so it is no accident that he now has a boat that could get an interesting result in the RTI. It has one other BIG advantage in that there is a local fleet of identical hulls that race in his local area, so we should be able to get a more accurate indication of how his particular rig compares with race tuned Bermudan rigs. As Arne says, it is comparing a cruising junk rig with a racing Bermudan rig, but it is still the best we have at this time. I hope Edward’s expenditure and effort is recognised as the significant contribution to the movement that it is.
David is right in saying that the experimenters are spread through out the world, and it is great that we have the JRA to keep us in contact with each other. This thread is a fine example of the useful pulling of ideas that could move the junk rig movement forward.
Cheers, Slieve.
PS. If anyone is offering a prize for the first JR to beat a BM rig to windward, then I am claiming the prize as I know that Poppy regularly beats comparable BM boats to windward when her bottom is clean. The problem is, can I prove it with identical hulls, propellers etc, and identical sail areas? Alternatively, can anyone prove that Poppy is not faster to windward and deny me the prize? We’re back to the question of how do we measure our performance.
PPS. I’ve always had the thought that there is one way to perform some cheap rig tests, but have never followed it up. The idea is to build kites made of two identical rigs but with the masts butt to butt and joined at the ‘partners’, making the two wings of the kite. Flown from 3 lines alongside a ‘benchmark’ or ‘yardstick’ standard kite then the one that flies highest or more nearly overhead would have the lowest L/D ratio. I’m not sure how it would work in practice, but if anyone has nothing better to do then there is something they could play with.