He at once pointed at the horizontal panels, and his view was that the battens would act as aerodynamic fences, preventing the air from moving spanwise.
- Arne
I agree on this one! Fences is a good word to describe what these batten pockets are acting like. As the camber pockets form on both tacks, there are fences on both tacks. I would speculate that only air from the upper panel would allow for tip vortex generation.
Arne, Slieve, I think that the tip vortex is of way bigger dimension as those longer telltales might be able to indicate. I suggest to have a look at the CFD-image of this NorthSails-Blog. It doesn’t matter if this is a pointy or junky rig, the physics are the same. I derive from this example, that telltales at the leech, of the length Arne used, won’t be able to show the vortex.
Graeme, very descriptive video, thanks for sharing! I grew up below the approach path of Frankfurt Airport. Luckily, our house was too far away, but the villages closer to the airport frequently suffered from the downwash: the tip vortex of those huge jets keep rotating for an incredible amount of time, while slowly moving to earth. They produce wind speeds of gail force and above. If such a vortex got close to a house, the roof goes flying. It happened quite oftenly.
Also, Graeme, thanks for the reminder to read those older magazines/articles. I take that as a well-meant kick from behind to get reading!
However, I feel urged to clear up on the bee flight. It is nothing more than a legend that a bee defies aerodynamics. There was a short time interval (some few months, if I remember correctly) in the first half of the 20th century, that aerodynamicists were not able to explain why a bee flies. As so often, this was popularized and well maintained by media over decades. In fact, aerodynamics are very well able to easily explain the bees flight. Bees are just using different effects than airplanes do, which was a bit hard to understand at first glance. Bees, as well as many other insects and also some birds, create huge eddies with each wing stroke – intentionally! Those eddies are way more powerful in creating lift than any stationay wing is able to do. Amazing natural evolution! If I resemble that correctly, the only reason why humans don’t use this lift effect is, that we do not know of sufficiently strong materials to carry those loads at a scale of humans, not insects. It might be that the evolution of graphen will be able to change this.
About winglets: Designing winglets is a huge, difficult task! It takes a lot of experiments/simulations, to get a winglet (or any similar wingtip device) right. It has to be tailored to each wing, considering velocity, flight dynamics and behaviour and goes as far as tailoring especially to the flight routes those planes take. It is not just sticking a plate to the end of a wing, because chances are very high that you get it wrong and even increase drag further. With the methods and budget we from the JRA have at hand, I would consider it a most hopeless task. In general, one challenge with fitting winglets/top plates to a sail is how to deal with the widely changing angle of attack of the sail in the upper region. Different states of heeling would only be one of the factors.
That is why I would opt against just simply fitting a plywood winglet. The biggest question would be: how do you ensure that it is parallel to the airflow, with the yard being at some good degree to horizontal (even when heeled)…
I rather took the winglets as an example to understand the effect of the batten pockets/ camber bags. Airflow fence would have been a more catchy word to describe it, I admit. Again: I think we already use winglet-like devices, by putting sewn-in camber in our sails. I would just love to underpin this, my speculations, with experiments/simulations!
I would go so far and speculate that a winglet device on a cambered junk might be of no significant effect, as the airflow is already prevented/ fenced by the batten pockets - which might be the reason for the superb upwind performance.
Slieve, that foto you posted of that fastest airplane shows a different kind of wingtip device: It is not a winglet. I would estimate that the wing is drawn aft to push the wingtip vortex further aft where it hurts less. Also, the very tip of the wing probably is constructed with downwards angle of attack – you generate a bit of negative lift on the edge, to counteract the vortex generation. You deal reduced lift for reduced drag. If done properly, the overall sum is positive.
One more thought concerning the reduction of wingtip vortex: as Graeme mentioned, the elliptical wing (see the famous Spitfire) is optimum to minimize the wingtip vortex - and thus minimizing induced drag - if no further help of wingtip devices is used. However, there is a reason why modern wings are not elliptical: The stall behaviour of the elliptical wing is dangerous. That’s why nowadays you treat optimum lift generation to safer handling characteristics. In the mentioned spitfire, this compromise was achieved by wing twist: the sections close to the fuselage had a higher angle of attack as the outer sections. Therefore, stalling did not appear at once all over the wing – which would be quite deadly – but appeared first at the fuselage and increased towards the wingtips with increasing angle of attack.
As always, speed and lift efficiency are not the only players in the game. We all know that from sailing: there is a lot more to it than just optimizing upwind performance!
However, from all the highly interesting posts here in this thread, one huge point arises to me: As long as we do not understand exactly what is really happening on our sails, or can visualize it, or can put numbers to it, it stays armchair speculations.
What is needed urgently to push development forward, are some proper experiments, or CFD simulations!