Chris, there are at least two schools of thought here:
One says that one should keep the boat so well balanced that the rudder is not needed to keep a straight course.
The other is the Chinese way of thinking which I share (and is used more and more in the West as well). Here the side forces are shared between the keel(s) and the rudder(s). To me the rudder is just another wing in the water, like fixed keels, centreboards and leeboards.
Any aerofoil or hydrofoil is held back by three types of drag; skin friction, form drag and induced drag, also called drag due to lift. As the need for lift at a certain speed increases, the foil will have to be set with a higher and higher angle of attack, AOA. That means increased leeway if the keel is struggling, or increased rudder angle in case of weather or lee helm. With increased AOA, the induced drag rises faster than the lift. If leeway or weather helm is a serious problem, then the permanent solution is to increase the size (better, draught) of the keel or rudder. As a result, they will produce the needed lift at a lower AOA, which means that the lift to drag ratio has been increased. The added skin friction due to the increased area is nothing compared to the reduced induced drag.
Paul’s bold modification has improved the rudder in three ways:
· By moving the rudder further aft, its turning leverage has been increased, so the actual load (lift) on it has been reduced.
· The rudder blade has been made as a modern hydrofoil with high resistance to stalling and with end plates to cut wingtip loss.
· By moving the rudder away from the hull, my hunch is that at least some of it will work in faster-moving water (as freestanding spade rudders do).
It is easy to be confused by ‘weather helm’. It may describe rudder angle or it may describe tiller forces. If Paul had just cured the high tiller forces by giving the rudder 20% balance, not much would have been won: If he were still sailing with 20° rudder angle, but with fingertip-light tiller, nothing would have been improved with respect to drag. However, I bet Paul can verify that the rudder angle has also been much reduced compared to on his original rudder. That is how he has cut the drag.
Arne