Externet
05-26-2009, 08:34 PM
Greetings to all. First post here. My terminology may be imprecise, but trying...
Imagine any plain ~40 feet sailboat, with the usual several thousand pounds of lead keel.
Such keel instead of making it heavy, making it just strong enough but 'light'.
A couple of horizontal fins somewhere along the keel length, could be at the bottom as an inverted T.
The fins with controllable angle of attack pivoting at their centerlines (as to demand minimal effort to change angle)
Both fins thin, with sharp attack and tail edges.
The heeling of the sailboat shifts a let's say pendulum mechanism that acts differentially directly to the left and right horizontal fins attack angles in the keel to counterforce towards a vertical mast. (As starboard fin up and port fin down)
A couple of rods inside the keel for the pendulum to actuate the fins.
Pros ? :
-Decreasing the weight of the keel reduces the wetted hull surface and draft, less drag.
-Less crew or no need for the crew to use their bodies to counterbalance to keep the sail vertical, or no crew performing that task.
-The vertical sail gets exposed to more wind; better trust efficiency.
-Smooth effortless sailing ?
-Plus/minus whatever you add because I don't know enough.
Cons ? :
-Drag from the horizontal fins.
-Mechanism to control the fins by a let's say pendulum that acts onto the horizontal fins to keep the boat from heeling.
-Plus/minus whatever you add because I don't know enough.
There is more fine tuning of the contraption as to simultaneously make the fins work as hydrofoils to further reduce the draft as speed increases.
In other words, the horizontal fins to autoforce the mast to a vertical at all times.:rolleyes:
Shoot me ?
Thanks,
Miguel
Imagine any plain ~40 feet sailboat, with the usual several thousand pounds of lead keel.
Such keel instead of making it heavy, making it just strong enough but 'light'.
A couple of horizontal fins somewhere along the keel length, could be at the bottom as an inverted T.
The fins with controllable angle of attack pivoting at their centerlines (as to demand minimal effort to change angle)
Both fins thin, with sharp attack and tail edges.
The heeling of the sailboat shifts a let's say pendulum mechanism that acts differentially directly to the left and right horizontal fins attack angles in the keel to counterforce towards a vertical mast. (As starboard fin up and port fin down)
A couple of rods inside the keel for the pendulum to actuate the fins.
Pros ? :
-Decreasing the weight of the keel reduces the wetted hull surface and draft, less drag.
-Less crew or no need for the crew to use their bodies to counterbalance to keep the sail vertical, or no crew performing that task.
-The vertical sail gets exposed to more wind; better trust efficiency.
-Smooth effortless sailing ?
-Plus/minus whatever you add because I don't know enough.
Cons ? :
-Drag from the horizontal fins.
-Mechanism to control the fins by a let's say pendulum that acts onto the horizontal fins to keep the boat from heeling.
-Plus/minus whatever you add because I don't know enough.
There is more fine tuning of the contraption as to simultaneously make the fins work as hydrofoils to further reduce the draft as speed increases.
In other words, the horizontal fins to autoforce the mast to a vertical at all times.:rolleyes:
Shoot me ?
Thanks,
Miguel