Erik and Evi Menzel Ivey wrote:
David - thank you for the detailed description of the Weaverbird planform.
Aspect Ratio: Your comments about the max AR for the planform are encouraging. I think I also understand the concern regarding the straight line panel diagonal distance and how positive stagger is affected by camber. Both you and Arne have written about it at times. More camber means more length of cloth, and the method of panel design suggested in PJR doesn't make allowances for it. If I understand correctly, a larger batten angle decreases the critical diagonal, but is that related to "This will mean that the pitch of the panels will be reduced," I don't quite understand "pitch" in this context. Also, am I correct in my understanding that your current sail design is in part relying on restrictive BP to induce positive stagger.
By batten pitch, I meant the vertical height between battens, "P" in PJR. In a high AR sail, it can be difficult to stop the luff from moving back and fore; even when there is good control over the top of the sail, using a THP or LHP, and the bottom part is constrained by a tack parrel, the middle part has some freedom to move, introducing a curve in the luff, concave or convex, or alternating. Short batten parrels stop this happening, so much so that the sail sets automatically in the right place, with zero stagger. I don't have to do anything after hoisting sail except take the slack out of the YHP. This is very convenient, but comes at a price - more friction. More friction when hoisting, and downhauls being more desirable when lowering. This is acceptable in a small sail, but may be less acceptable in a maximum-size sail. I would be inclined to think in terms of what Arne has called "semi-short batten parrels" - not so long as to allow the sail to move fore and aft completely freely, not so short as to bind on the mast when hoisting or lowering. With these, I would use an upper luff HP and a mid luff HP, to control the fore and aft position and also to act as downhauls.
Sail balance, yard angle, yard length: These sound like an iterative approach is necessary. On Arne's design, with a 10% sail balance and the yard length equal to P, a 70 deg yard angle seems to result in a sling point sufficiently aft of the mast but not too far. Makes sense from the geometry that if the yard length doesn't change, the sling point moves aft and shortening the yard moves it forward again. Other design elements such as sail balance limits to still allow hinges to work and cloth orientation coming off the yard are noted. For our boat, a 10% sail balance seems "fit" depending on whether equal sized sails or a schooner rig.
The balance of my sail is 15%. It can't really be any less with a low angled yard, so if you/Raven can only accept 10%, then you will need to go with the higher yard angle of Arne's sailplan.
Hinged Battens: Understood!
Hinges/Battens: I have not sense of the loads on the junk sail so your comments are much appreciated. As a first guess I was thinking the hinged batten should be stronger or at least as strong as the straight battens on a purely cambered sail. Are the stresses and loading on the battens significantly different (lower) when they are allowed to hinge?
I think that there is little difference between straight and hinged battens in the amount of bending load developed in the tubes, and the bending load peaks in the centre of the batten. However, there are local "bursting" effects near the hinges.
Some added questions:
Are the hinges held within the batten by the batten pockets or are the hinges held in the battens by some other means.
As Arne says, the hinges need to be held together. The pockets can tend to slacken in some circumstances (eg flat sail, bulging pocket), and in the early days of using hinges, there were cases where they separated. Some kind of line, strap, or lashing should be devised, depending on the detail design of the hinge.
It seems like any tension to stretch the sail along the batten pockets would make it harder for the hinges to articulate. So shaping and the smoothness of the sail has to rely on the initial cut.
See below - if the pocket goes into tension on one tack, there is some camber inhibiting/limiting effect. There is a stronger effect in the top two battens, whereby they are reluctant to flip from one tack to the other, if there is a lot of compression on them (this argues in favour of a lower yard angle and an even division of the change of angle in the leech from top panel to lower leech); and if the hinges have too much of an angle of articulation. I only use one hinge in the top batten, with an angle not exceeding 10 degrees. The next batten can have two hinges, with a total angle not exceeding 15 degrees, and the lower battens can have two hinges, with a total angle not exceeding 20 degrees. The bottom batten (boom) can have a total angle not exceeding 20 degrees also, but it has to be remembered that this angle also obtains in the vertical plane, so must be controlled by the topping lifts and mast lift. I have found these angles by trial and error, and if I stay within them, I get good articulation in all but the lightest of airs.
Your batten pocket design is such that the batten symmetrically "bulges" the sail and the pocket. This shows nicely in the photos and would encourage the sail to set the same on each tack. I noted that at the mast, where there is not pocket to allow for the BP to attach the battens to rest directly on the mast, the sail remains flat. Could this possibly cause a distortion of the sail shape if the diameter of the battens - on a larger sail - is larger?
Actually, I aim to make the pockets such that the batten "bulges" the sail only one quarter of its diameter. You have correctly identified that if there are gaps in the pockets, and if the sail is not flat, there must be some distortion. It would be easier to sew the pockets on flat, so that the batten's centreline is in line with the sail, and this would fix another thing: if the sail is flat, and the pocket does all the "bulging", then the hinges tend to come apart on one tack, go into more compression on the other. This is undesirable. But if the pockets are sewn on flat, there can be no gaps in them. So, I compromise with just a little bulging of the sail.
Erik