Michael Moore wrote:
Richard Brooksby wrote:
Perhaps the CLR is shifting a long way forward on heeling. Maybe because the keels are assymetrical foils that “fly” upwind, and the windward keel lifts when heeling. I can imagine that would move the CLR a great deal if the keel foils are effective. But this is speculation and I have no proof.
All monohulls do this. When a boat heels the underwater shape changes and the result is they turn to weather. You can test it, as I have done, as follows.
On a F2 or F3 day set up to go to windward, then let go the tiller. My Coromandel will carry on without luffing up. Slowly move over to the lea side and the boat will luff up a little. Move to weather and she will bare away! All well set up boats will do this tegardless of their rig!
Er...
.. that depends on the hull shape. However, during the last forty years, most boats have been made with broader and broader sterns, known as unbalanced hulls, and these certainly will develop weather helm when heeled. If they are not fitted with large, efficient and well-balanced rudders, one will have a struggle to keep them on course. Remember, it is not enough to fix the balance by moving the CE of the sail forward. When rolling in a seaway, downwind (with or without sails up), an un-balanced hull will be prone to broaching, again unless there is a big rudder or two to hold the course.
I may sound like a rudder nutcase, constantly nagging about this. Maybe I am. Remember though that this was how the Chinese seamen and boatmen controlled their ships. Their rudders were (and are) made oversize, in our eyes, to act as centreboards number two. The bonus was quick tacking and better handling downwind - most probably with the fore cb. raised.
My last boat, the 6.5m Frøken Sørensen had a typical unbalanced hull, with an axe-type bow and a very wide stern. She got away with it because her designers had fitted her with a huge, deep, well-balanced and perfectly streamlined swing-up rudder. Her rudder never let us down.
Arne