Does symmetrical airfoil work better than flat?

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  • 18 Aug 2017 18:10
    Reply # 5035870 on 5013727

    I have some thoughts for your cost-benefit analysis.

    I currently have a flat H-R sail from 1983, straight out of "Practical Junk Rig" and I sail happily in all directions, even though I can't make progress to windward in a F7 on a short chop.

    Make no mistake I'm interested in playing with other rigs, but that's because I'll enjoy the construction and experimentation. That's the key part to factor into your analysis.

    I'm pretty sure I could achieve everything I want to as fast as I really want to with my current sail.

    I certainly wouldn't spend much it anything on a ready-constructed new sail, which tells you something about the value of efficiency to me!


    Edits: this site is really not mobile friendly!
    Last modified: 18 Aug 2017 18:13 | Anonymous member
  • 09 Aug 2017 17:13
    Reply # 5020968 on 5013727
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Robert,

    no I have not seen one. It is just that a boat like the Folkboat, which is good close-hauled and which will never really take off when reaching and running, has most probably a quite round polar diagram, at least compared to the light flyers.

    Arne

  • 09 Aug 2017 17:04
    Reply # 5020941 on 5018006
    Deleted user
    Arne Kverneland wrote:

    I realise that my Ingeborg will never really fly. With her six metre waterline and with some displacement, she will hardly ever see seven knots. I can live with that. The point with that boat is that she has the roundest polar diagram of any boats I have owned.


    Hi Arne--Is the polar plot for IF or Nordic folkboat online some where? I've searched but can't find.

    thanks

    robert self

    Last modified: 09 Aug 2017 17:07 | Deleted user
  • 09 Aug 2017 14:46
    Reply # 5020669 on 5013727
    Deleted user

    Yes, it seems it would work much like my understanding of flaps on an airplane wing.  In landing they provide some lift to allow for a lower stall speed as well as drag to slow the plane down. It's good to have this forum to encourage and work through brainstorming.

  • 09 Aug 2017 09:55
    Reply # 5020327 on 5018175
    Anonymous member (Administrator)
    VO TO wrote:
    I came up with another design that is a cost-effective way to add camber.

    I read about wing tail flaps on "Theory of Wing Sections" by Abbott and von Doenhoff. A flat flap 0.2 of the chord in length, with 30-40 degrees of deflection can add quite a bit of coefficient of lift. It is like gurney flaps, but it slides on a hoop.... like the aerojunk rig foresail that slides back and forth on an arc to create camber.



    Vo,

    did Abbot and von Doenhoff mention anything about increased drag in the process? It would surprise me hugely if a 40 degree flap would not increase the drag as much as the lift.

    Arne

  • 09 Aug 2017 08:00
    Reply # 5020187 on 5018175
    VO TO wrote:

    …The forward 80% of the sail is a regular flat junk rig (or a cambered junk cloth, or 2-ply wingsail section), then the last 20% splits out into a V batten. The arc connects to the V batten ends; looks like a slice-of-pie outline. The 20% panels slides on the arc with rings/grommets. The sheeting attaches to the rings/grommets to steer the flap to deflect and also steers/trims the forward 80% sail.

    No gap between the trailing flap and main sail, it's all one sail. The flap may be un-battened to get some curve. No moving parts (except rings sliding on an arc) or joints. 

    This cool invention needs a cool name.... I call it the 'Flapper' :-)


    i don't know, how much of your design i got right – could you add a sketch of your 'flapper'?

    ueli

    Last modified: 09 Aug 2017 08:00 | Anonymous member
  • 08 Aug 2017 12:38
    Reply # 5018175 on 5017093
    Deleted user
    Arne Kverneland wrote:

    If you are considering making a hotter version of the JR, wing or whatever, I suggest you make a little cost-benefit analysis before you go ahead.

    The fairly plain JRs I design, basically Hasler-McLeod sails with camber added in the single ply panels, are most probably not the fastest version of the JRs to windward, but they are still quite good. Therefore, I think it will take serious improvements (read: cost and/or weight and complexity) to achieve as much as 5% increased VMG to windward.  When reaching and running, the gain over a plain, cambered JR will be very moderate indeed. Are you willing to pay for that 5% extra speed to windward, either by shelling out serious money, or by having to work long hours in the workshop to assemble a big number of bits, which well may decide to fall apart a couple of times before you get it right? If yes, then by all means, go ahead  -  but remember:
    It is so easy to dream up great, aerodynamically superb rigs in the armchair. It is quite another thing to actually convert the dream into reality.

    As said, I go for the ‘second-best’, straight JR with camber. However, it saddens me quite a bit to think of the many people (2/3 of the ‘junkies’?) who are still sailing under inefficient, flat sails. I have owned one such sail, and I most certainly don’t want to own one again.

    Arne

     


    I came up with another design that is a cost-effective way to add camber.

    I read about wing tail flaps on "Theory of Wing Sections" by Abbott and von Doenhoff. A flat flap 0.2 of the chord in length, with 30-40 degrees of deflection can add quite a bit of coefficient of lift. It is like gurney flaps, but it slides on a hoop.... like the aerojunk rig foresail that slides back and forth on an arc to create camber.

    It a lot less material than the aerojunk, because the two long wishbones are not needed. The forward 80% of the sail is a regular flat junk rig (or a cambered junk cloth, or 2-ply wingsail section), then the last 20% splits out into a V batten. The arc connects to the V batten ends; looks like a slice-of-pie outline. The 20% panels slides on the arc with rings/grommets. The sheeting attaches to the rings/grommets to steer the flap to deflect and also steers/trims the forward 80% sail.

    No gap between the trailing flap and main sail, it's all one sail. The flap may be un-battened to get some curve. No moving parts (except rings sliding on an arc) or joints. 

    This cool invention needs a cool name.... I call it the 'Flapper' :-)


  • 08 Aug 2017 11:40
    Reply # 5018149 on 5014689
    Deleted user
    David Tyler wrote:
    VO TO wrote:

    Hello,

    I'd been sailing around WhitSundays Islands last week and had some thoughts about sail designs. (side note: met up with Graham in s/v Arion) I would like to build a wingsail, but a simple one with a symmetrical airfoil. I came up with an original cambered wingsail design, but now feel the extra mechanics of reversing camber will be too complicated to warrant the increased lift. 

    Any thoughts from wing builders out there?

    You were probably getting more complicated than is strictly necessary. I, too  have made that mistake.. 

    The double-cone hinges that I currently use are the easiest and best way to get articulation, and a single straight tube is the easiest, lightest and best way to carry the loads. It remains to add a luff former component, carrying no load and as light as possible. I'm thinking about it, with a view to making a wingsail this winter.

    Thank you for the advice!
  • 08 Aug 2017 10:09
    Reply # 5018006 on 5017247
    Anonymous member (Administrator)
    David Tyler wrote:

    Am I a tweaker or a fiddler? 

    You are probably both, David, but don’t worry. The main thing is that you are a doer. You therefore know what it takes to complete a project. Now that you have acquired experience with Weaverbird’s Mk1 version of a wingsail, it will be interesting to read about the results you get when you upgrade the sail to Mk II, with the mast hidden inside a doubled fore-section (..that’s what you are planning, right?...).

    My posting below was more a warning to those who want the non plus ultra rig before having upgraded from flat to cambered sails yet.

    I may even have done a bit rig fiddling myself, from time to time. I still have a couple of ideas lined up in my head, but for the last years I have spent more energy on debugging my junkrigs  -  getting the sheets, lazyjacks and different parrels right.

    I realise that my Ingeborg will never really fly. With her six metre waterline and with some displacement, she will hardly ever see seven knots. I can live with that. The point with that boat is that she has the roundest polar diagram of any boats I have owned.

    Annie. I have done some motorsailing in other’s boats and I don’t mind motorsailing if one is a bit short of time. When topping up the tank after these trips, we have found that the sail has cut the diesel-consumption with as much as 50-70%. Quite amazing; the diesel purrs along at a constant 2200rpm and we expect it to have a constant consumption, but that is not the case. If a fuel-flow meter were made visible in the cockpit, we would no doubt be surprised to watch how the reading flies up and down with varying winds. I would therefore encourage boatmen to fit an auxiliary JR on their displacement motor vessels, and thus end up with a greener and safer boat. Graham Cox has written in other postings about how the rig and the engine of his Arion are backing each other up to windward. Personally I neither have a work schedule nor long voyages to do, and Ingeborg is, as said, quite good upwind, so my use of her outboard engine is generally restricted to getting us out of, and sometimes back into the harbour.

    Arne



    Last modified: 08 Aug 2017 10:10 | Anonymous member (Administrator)
  • 07 Aug 2017 22:06
    Reply # 5017247 on 5013727

    Am I a tweaker or a fiddler? A man's gotta have a hobby, and mine is trying to invent better rigs - which doesn't always mean faster rigs. Sometimes it means getting the most performance for the least investment of time, money, skill and other resources.

    I've mentioned the Pareto principle, or 80/20 rule, before, and Arne now mentions cost/benefit analysis. Let's be honest - a rig like I have now, high AR and well cambered, is easy enough to build, and as good as most sailors need, unless they want to race to windward. To get those final few percentage points of performance is costly, and if it wasn't providing me with the mental exercise that I should be giving my poor old brain, there really wouldn't be much justification for it.

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