Anonymous wrote:
Howard, your mention of the Burt Rutan 'Boomarang' design seems a good comparison in terms of what I am getting at -- there are both performance and habitation concerns at play here, undoubtably taken care of with flap control and trim by fuel distribution on the aircraft, while on a double canoe, habitation can be less constrained and certainly less technically demanding..... being the reason why the old Pahi shunter provided lightweight and low windage shelter for probably a good many crew persons under a leaf cover dodger, with trim effected by them moving to windward or otherwise, as comfort or performance demanded.
I see that you lean toward an aircraft type cockpit as a habitation unit and guess that having a big hull to leeward is not your priority and that some sort of active foil out to one side might even be on your radar... in which case stepping the mast through what is called an aka, would be the way to go.
That would be more like a tacking proa though, rather than a catamaran and good for flat water only.
Having akas on both sides makes sense as well then -- no doubt why you are playing with the double outrigger kayak.
Jeremy:
Intellectual exercises pursuing the different possible solutions to problems have always been a pastime of mine. Sometimes they result in interesting innovative solutions, sometimes they lead up blind alleys...... but there is no cost to that when nothing is invested. Unlike most people I do not even own a TV.... In fact I've never lived with one believe it or not. I read, sketch, work out solutions to the various problems I deal with, and since the advent of the internet, it has been possible to interact with many people, who I would never have had any chance of coming into contact with.
The reality is that what I might toy with and dream about is a far cry from where I really expect to end up. A simple catamaran with a biplane rig with free standing masts like Oryx, and quite a few others, is a well proven formula....it works, though leaves some things to be desired. I do not have the resources or time to pursue something as innovative as you are. My goal is to be at a point where I can set off so sea in something I am reasonably comfortable with within a couple of years ( really can't leave sooner). I've toyed with building, but that's a huge commitment, and inevitably ends up costing dear in time and money, and many people who set out on that path, particularly at my age (by no means advanced), imagining a few years, end up spending so many years that their project becomes part of their estate. Pursuing a dream is what keeps many of us going. At some point we must exercise some triage, setting priorities....... Pardey's creed "go small, go simple, go now" resonates with me, as does the advice to buy the smallest boat that will do the job, not the largest you can afford. I think I've already covered why a multihull and a junk rig are high priorities... safety, comfort, reduced fatigue, shallow draft, simple sail handling. minimal components to maintain, low ongoing costs, etc etc etc.
To say that I'm in awe of your project would be an understatement.... I've built boats in the past, but nothing on that scale or with that level of innovation. I love outside the box thinking and outside the box thinkers...... men like Buckminster Fuller, when I was a pre-teen, and of course Burt Rutan, whom I recently mentioned fall into that category. A number of people.. quite a few actually... in the JRA.
Thank you for posting these photos of your model. Am I right in seeing a crab claw rig, with tackle to move the tack of the sail fore and aft through shunts. The V attached near center of the curved spar is the sheet? And I'm not sure what happens there during a shunt. It really is all Greek to me. Trying to decipher things from pictures and diagrams is far from new to me........ I'll have an "Ah HA" moment and it will all fall into place.
H.W.