hatch replacement partners? flat sail vs camber?

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  • 06 Jan 2016 23:32
    Reply # 3744082 on 3712908
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Paul,

    19 and 22% balance sounds good to me, and 12 and 10% camber makes a lot of sense on such a heavy-displacement boat as La Chica. I have many times seen the 23ton Samson rushing past us (check photo, below, 10% in foresail, 8 in main). She goes quite well even in light winds, but from F4 she goes in “locomotive mode”  -  quite impressing, really.

    I have wondered about this fear of using real camber on offshore junks, having never heard that seagoing boats with Bermuda- or gaff-rigs must have their sail made flat.

    Cheers, Arne

    ( PS:I just noticed that we have just passed 600 JRA members  -  602 to be precise...)

  • 06 Jan 2016 01:48
    Reply # 3741689 on 3712908

    Arne, balance is 19% in the main & 22% in the foresail. In a schooner, I'm not sure that the split rig makes much sense as the foresail is already doing  the (more or less) job of the jiblets for the main.

    I suspect that the generous camber my sails have (10% in main & 12% in foresail) also has something to do with why the port tack seems to be so unaffected. The mast just disappears in all that cloth!

    I know the amount of camber that I have is controversial in certain quarters but the sails undoubtedly produce drive & lots of it. LC heels as much as any Bermuda rigged boat does and that to me is a sign that real drive is being generated. I very much doubt that I'd be getting the same windward & reaching performance with less camber or flat sails.

    BTW We me up with another Tahitianna at the end of last summer. She was Bermuda cutter rigged and could set 750 SqFt (LC 650 SqFt) with the aid of a genny. In a force 4 - 5 we were able to show her a clean pair of heels on all points of sailing and I suspect we could do it in any wind strength. Anyway, I do believe that that little incident proves what I've long thought, namely the junk rig is the best and the fastest rig I've had on LC to date.

  • 05 Jan 2016 09:21
    Reply # 3740276 on 3712908
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Paul,
    I am really glad to read what you say about La Chica’s sails. When I made my first cambered panel sail (barrel method), way back in ‘94, I fitted telltales at the leech, partly because the blue sailcloth was not translucent, and partly to let me see if I could keep the airflow attached to the lee side, on the port (“bad”) tack. The sail had around 10-12% balance. In theory, the most important things on a wing or sail happen near the leading edge. However, the trailing edge telltales surely indicated attached airflow on both tacks. We may get a few degrees wider drag angle by this setup, but the tacking angle indicates that it hardly is more than 2-4° wider than without a mast.

    Now it surely appears that this also works on your higher-balance sail (20 – 25%?). This is good to know. The photo below, from your album, shows how the sail bulges right aft of the foremast, just as on the photo of Johanna. Maybe (.. some day, next winter...) I must draw another set of master sails, this time with a lower yard, to accept 15 – 25% balance.  However, from 25% balance Slieve’s Split Junk Rig gets interesting...

    Still, I guess my ‘default rig’ for my use will probably be the Johanna style rig with 70° yard. This rig seems to give the biggest sail area with a given mast height  -  something to consider in my area, with so many bridges around (..to cross under some of them, I have to drop two panels...). That big sail area is very useful downwind, and that high-peaking top section has proven to be remarkably efficient when sailing with only 2  -  4 panels hoisted.

    Cheers, Arne

      

    PS: Your saying about LC's performance with the sail to windward of the mast verifies that The myth of the bad tack has been firmly busted... 

    Last modified: 05 Jan 2016 14:49 | Anonymous member (Administrator)
  • 05 Jan 2016 01:29
    Reply # 3739539 on 3712908

    Arne, having more balance than the norm makes one think that the distortion caused by the sail being distorted by the mast would somehow interfere with the sails ability to produce drive. However in practise it does not appear to be the case. LC (as you must know by now) sails very well and is more than able to hold her own to the windward against both other junks (Zebedee can confirm that) and against the pointy competition. She also exhibits the same peculiarities that most other junks exhibit in that the (slightly) better tack is the one in which the mast is buried in the sail. So it would appear (at least for LC) that having more balance than usual in a cambered sail is not in anyway a disadvantage. Certainly, I'd not hesitate to do the same again.

    Re the van Loan sail, having designed & built a van Loan rig (Carl Bosteck's Aphrodite) I think I'm qualified to comment on this. The van Loan rig is not really in anyway different from the standard PJR rig by very much. The main difference being the lower yard angle. However the yard angle is related to balance. If you need lots of balance, the yard angle should be lower and vies versa. What you are trying to do is keep the centre of the yard in line with the halyard blocks as they hang from the masthead. If you have to much drift, you will struggle to get a cambered sail to set well. You may get away with it in a flat sail but not with a cambered one which is much less accommodating of geometry errors.

    The van Loan sail as shown in van Loan's book is not peaked enough for a cambered sail, you need to increase the yard angle. Exactly how much, depends on the amount of balance you need (as I've already said above). I found this out the hard way when I did Aphrodite. You can also very easily prove this to yourself by building a simple stick and string model.

  • 04 Jan 2016 20:33
    Reply # 3739190 on 3712908
    Deleted user

    After more drawing, starring at mast positions,  and scurrying around with a tape measure I have found my potential ideal sail plan. 

    If I use a 375 square ft van loan sail,  at his specified 25% balance,  use a lead of 9% which falls into line  with both van loan and pjr,  the mast falls into the perfect spot for my hull. I don't have to cut out my aft water tank as I would with 30% and no lead.  Also,  the mast would be placed far enough aft that I would not sacrifice my hatch or v birth at all.  Best of all no obstructed keel bolts, and no coach roof to contend with,  just flat deck. 

    Will this play nice with around 10% camber in the lower 4 panels,  5% camber in the upper 5th panel, and flat top 2 panels.  I realize I will probably need a yard haul, and there is a good chance of Hong Kong parcels.  

    My concern is that pjr and van loan do not account for camber in there calculations for deciding lead and mast placement.  

    Thanks for all the help so far. 

  • 04 Jan 2016 09:03
    Reply # 3738102 on 3712908
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    James,

    If I had a conversion project ahead of me and the preferred mast position favoured a high-balance sail, I would choose Slieve McGalliard’s  Split Junk Rig (SJR). Since I like to use camber in my sails, I would be worried if the mast had to sit near the max camber point, as with the Van Loan planforms  (.. however, Paul J Thompson, with his La Chica could maybe prove me wrong there). With Slieve’s SJR this problem has been solved.

    If you have looked at my rigs, you will see that I have stuck to 70° yards and little balance in my sails. Originally, this was because I wanted low-balance sails, since they give minimum distortion of the camber (..and the SJR had not been invented yet...). Today the reasons have mainly been that on the projects I have had, the best mast positions (far forward) have dictated the use of such sails.

    Even though I have not sailed with a SJR, I have read Slieve’s reports on it (plus reports in Practical Boat Owner), and I see no reason why it should not be good. It even is a junkrig, basically, with the sheet controlling several battens. Therefore, it will handle and reef just as easily as any other junk, without needing to tie down the battens.

    In comparison, Beneteau’s experimental wing sail and Paul McKay’s AeroJunk only have their booms sheeted (right?), so will most probably need some reefing lines at the leech end for each batten. In addition, although Paul’s Aerojunk sounds and looks to have very good aerodynamic, I guess I am more confident at the sewing machine than as a mechanic, so my choice would be Slieve’s SJR: The SJR calls for some sewing challenges, but the battens are just straight tubes.

    Anyway, good luck!

    Arne

     

  • 04 Jan 2016 01:10
    Reply # 3737665 on 3712908
    Deleted user
    The more I draw up different sail plans the more I like the mast placement of the split rig. I am just about to start working 60 hours a week in a couple days to get all the things necessary to do the conversion right. I would really like to have a 30 ft above partners mast, and go with an anodized flag pole. I am still not nailed down the exact plan, but have it narrowed down between more or less a split rig setup or a cambered van loan style rig with the balance somewhere between 25% - 32%. An interesting thing happens at 25% balance, the mast placement would be the same as the Bermudan rig. I have a compression post there, and I don't know if it would sail well. I am unsure if I want to use any lead when placing the mast if I go with the van loan with no split. Much pondering, and more drawing to do. I figure I have between 2 and 3 years to build and tune everything before I try and get brave. Fortunately, there is plenty in my current cruising grounds to keep me happy while things progress :) If all goes well, I should at least be re-rigged as some form of junk by the end of may, if not for sure by the end of august.


    This is DSS (Dynamic Stability System)

    http://www.dynamicstabilitysystems.com/

    Something like that may be best left to professionals, but I bet some tinker somewhere has tried something similar.


    Last modified: 04 Jan 2016 01:27 | Deleted user
  • 03 Jan 2016 19:53
    Reply # 3737400 on 3712908

    Regarding balanced rigs and mast placement my development of the AeroJunk showed what could be achieved and what would not work.

    In general a jib of 25% of the total sailplan or 33% the size of the main is as much as is desirable. If you attempt to make the jib larger then in stronger winds the whole sailrig turns broadside to the wind - not recommended!

    With the help of Jef Verhaar from Belgium I have worked out a a mathematical way to check your design.

    Find the sail areas and Centres of Effort (C/E) of both the jib and the main. Measure from the Main C/E to the mast centreline in metres, multiply together with the main sail area in m2 to produce a 'Factor'. Do the same for the jib which will produce a smaller factor. Finally divide the smaller factor by the larger one. If the result is less than 0.2 the the rig will balance perfectly. If the result is 0.2 or greater then the sail will turn broadside in a F5 wind. (Use feet/inches and square feet or metres and square metres. Do not mix the two) This makes it easy to check any potential design before commiting yourself.

    Best wishes to all, Paul McKay

  • 03 Jan 2016 02:59
    Reply # 3736583 on 3736466
    Slieve McGalliard wrote:I thought you would have been second, Annie, not first. I fully understand you concerns, yet thinking back to sailing in gales I seem to remember that I always wanted some drag aft to counter the bows being knocked off by the wind and waves. 


    I guess it's a case of different ships, different long splices.  Neither of the two boats in which I did most of my offshore sailing every needed to drag a drogue or had problems steering downwind in big winds.  The high stern would be great at anchor or hove to, but I wonder what its effects would be when running in heavy weather.  But as you say. we're wondering off topic and had better stop before the webmaster brings us up with two round turns!
    Last modified: 03 Jan 2016 03:00 | Anonymous member
  • 03 Jan 2016 02:54
    Reply # 3736582 on 3733035
    James Hleba wrote: Ideally, if I can get a system well tuned and reliable, I would like to gut my cock pit, build an enclosure with a dome bubble hatch

    I have used both a 'bubble' and a pram hood and would unhesitatingly recommend that you go fro the pram hood.  It is infinitely superior to the bubble.  If you search our site, you will find some discussions about it.

     in a position where I can run the rudder, keep watch and control the lines while under way. The main benefit of this would be better usage of the loads of empty space in the area, storage, and a little work bench to work on making new rope stropped blocks, sewing sail panels, ect. It would be great to have all my tools organized and a nice place to work on things when anchored. Also, I really like cold climates, so it would be nice to be able to sail and keep warm and dry through a storm. Thank you for all of your input. The goal of this boat is mainly for coastal cruising with maybe some small passages from Canada to Alaska for now. After I conquer that, I am sure I will need to make adjustments to my boat.

    JJust curios is there any form of DIY DSS available? What would it be called? A sliding dagger board? Any who, I still have at least a few more months to plan everything before the weather will cooperate enough to get any work done.

    What's DSS?
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