View Full Version : Herreshoff's catamaran reasoning


brian eiland
12-07-2004, 11:14 PM
(courtesy of Claas.vanderLinde on another forum)

Here is what Herreshoff himself wrote about it in 1877:
"... In the fall of 1875 I was thinking and thinking how to get great speed out of single hulled boats, of the kind in common use. To get great speed, thought I, one must have great power, one must have a great sail, you must have something to hold it up, and that something must be large and wide, and have a large sectional surface, and also a great deal of frictional surface.

These properties in a hull to give stability are not compatible with attaining great speed. Indeed, the more one tries to make a stiff, able hull the less speed will be attained, even if corresponding additions are made to the sail.

So then, there are two important principles of speed which constantly work against each other. If we increase the power to get more speed we must increase the stability of the hull correspondingly. An increased hull has more resistance, both from sectional area and surface friction. So what we would fain gain one way we needs must lose in the other.

Well, a boat must have width, and the wider she is, generally speaking, the more stable she will be. But a wide boat cannot have great speed, apply what power you will to her, so the next thing that is to be done is to decrease the sectional area and in a measure retain stability; the boat would have power to lift at a distance each side of the keel, where it would do great work. I kept on following this principle, getting the keel higher and higher, until by and by the keel came out of the water, when, lo and behold! there was the double boat!

Nothing else to be done but take a saw and split her in two, spread it apart a little way, and cover all with a deck, and there you are! That was the rough road which I traveled, and having arrived thus far I abandoned my ill-shaped hulls, and in their place substituted two long, narrow, very light boats and connected them at the bow, stern and middle. The boats (hulls) must be far enough apart, so that the water which they displace in moving will not crowd against them on the inside. To hold them apart at such a distance rigidly would be difficult, and not only difficult but useless; indeed, just exactly the thing which should not be done. So the fore tie beam and the after tie beam must be connected to the hulls by universal joints, and the main beam in the centre must be joined to the hulls in such a manner as to give them freedom in a slight lateral motion, for it will be seen that if the bow of one boat pitches she must pitch in a circle round a centre, and in doing that the two hulls are drawn bodily together, slightly, to be sure, but enough to pull them to pieces if provision is not made for it. ..."

(Source: Herreshoff, Nathanael Greene. "The Amaryllis. How the Yachting Wonder of 1876 Was Conceived and Built." New York Herald, April 16, 1877, p. 5.)

By 1877 this looked like http://www.voilesnews.fr/dossier_catavore/photos_catavore_02/photos_dossier_historique_des_multicoques/Amaryllis_II-02.JPG

For more info one might visit the museum site http://www.herreshoff.org/frames/mmframe.htm

Skippy
12-08-2004, 12:10 AM
I kept on following this principle, getting the keel higher and higher, until by and by the keel came out of the water, when, lo and behold! there was the double boat!

To hold them apart at such a distance rigidly would be difficult, and not only difficult but useless; indeed, just exactly the thing which should not be done. So the fore tie beam and the after tie beam must be connected to the hulls by universal joints, and the main beam in the centre must be joined to the hulls in such a manner as to give them freedom in a slight lateral motion, for it will be seen that if the bow of one boat pitches she must pitch in a circle round a centre, and in doing that the two hulls are drawn bodily together, slightly, to be sure, but enough to pull them to pieces if provision is not made for it. ..."
That's neat brian. Do you have any idea where I can find a further discussion of these structural stresses? I'm very interested in them, but I still haven't figured them out.

Also, have you ever seen Malcolm McIntyre's hyddroplane from the 1930s? Bernard Smith has a picture of it in "The 40-Knot Sailboat". It's also a catamaran with the adjustable beams, and it has a twin rig mounted on an A-frame. The windward sail is tilted leeward so it pushes down on the windward half of the boat, and the leeward sail conversely is tilted windward so it lifts up the leeward sid of the boat. Together, they produce very litttle heeling moment, maybe even none, even at high speed. The daggerboards are canted inward for the same reason, and the hulls are made to plane.

tspeer
12-08-2004, 01:17 AM
If you want to see some aerodynamic results from A-frame rigs, go to http://www.tspeer.com/landyachts/twin/dragstudy.htm

The key is even though you divide the area into two panels, you don't want to reduce the height of the rig compared to the equivlent single wing rig. And the rig is best suited to rigid wings, because you get the best performance by sheeting out the leeward panel when the boat starts to become overpowered, but keep the windward panel driving. Naturally, operating a soft sail at low or zero lift will make it flog, so you need a rigid wing. Theory says it's actually beneficial to backwind the leeward panel instead of backing off on the windward panel if the craft is still overpowered.

http://www.tspeer.com/landyachts/twin/dragstudy15.gif
CA in this figure is the axial (fore-aft) force coefficient - negative is goodness. CA/Cl is the axial force divided by the heeling moment - positive is goodness. These data consider only the inviscid lift and induced drag. Adding the same parasite drag to both cases won't change their relative ranking with regard to drive, but will amplify the differences in net drive/heeling moment.

The A-frame rig poses some interesting structural problems, too, since the compression on the leeward panel increases without bound as the apparent wind speed increases. You can't asume the stability of the craft will cap the loads because you're compensating for the heeling moment aerodynamically.

Skippy
12-10-2004, 01:22 AM
1. If you want to see some aerodynamic results from A-frame rigs, go to www.tspeer.com/...

2. The key is even though you divide the area into two panels, you don't want to reduce the height of the rig compared to the equivlent single wing rig.

3. Theory says it's actually beneficial to backwind the leeward panel instead of backing off on the windward panel if the craft is still overpowered.

4. The A-frame rig poses some interesting structural problems, too, since the compression on the leeward panel increases without bound as the apparent wind speed increases. You can't asume the stability of the craft will cap the loads because you're compensating for the heeling moment aerodynamically.
1. Thanks Tom, I'll check that out.

2. I would expect that to depend on the boat's beam, since some minimum angle is necessary to eliminate the heeling moment.

3. Wow, very counter-intuitive. I would think you'd get a wicked lee helm. Also extra displacement. In fact, I thought maybe sheeting out the windward surface would be a good way to tack.

4. I see the windward mast pushing down on the top of the leeward mast, is that what you mean? But I don't understand how that's a stability issue. The other thing that worries me is that by relying on canted sails & keels instead of ballast, the vessel is subject to catastrophic failure (heeling) if the windward keel is ever jostled out of the water.

tspeer
12-10-2004, 02:07 AM
When I was looking at the A-frame rig, I had a landyacht in mind. For that application, downforce is useful, since it increases the traction of the tires.

I set the apex angle such that skidding and heeling happened at the same time. If the base is wide enough, then you can get the condition where the line of action of the windward wing passes through the contact point of the lee wheel. Such a rig would not heel at all with the leeward wing sheeted out all the way. But this is wider than necessary, because there is some stability from the yacht's weight that can be used and because such a non-heeling yacht can still skid. The optimum apex angle turned out to be around 18 degrees, which is quite reasonable.

For a boat, you might want to sheet out the windward wing, which would effectively cant the rig to windward. However, the heeling moment of the leeward wing about the leeward hull is not much reduced from that of a single wing rig.

As for lee helm, I didn't try to estimate the effects on steering trim. I believe you're right that there would be considerable lee helm. Whether or not that's a problem with a landyacht, I don't know. It may actually be beneficial, in that to have steering you have to place some of the weight on the front wheel. That weight represents side force that's not available from the lee wheel. If the yacht has lee helm, then the front wheel is carrying a sideload in the right direction.

The relationship between stability and lee panel compression is the same as the relationship between stability and mast compression on a boat. The limit of stability caps the lift on the rig, and this caps the compression needed to resist the shroud tension. If there's no llimit to the stability, there's no limit to the compression.

There is one other advantage to the A-frame rig: it eliminates one stay. Only fore and aft stays are needed. This is a significant reduction in parasite drag (windage), especially for a yacht that will experience triple digit apparent wind speeds. There's also the potential for weight reduction in the body and axle, since these don't have to carry significant bending moments. The axle only serves to keep the wheels apart. The body weight is actually slung like a hammock from the apex of the rig.

An A-frame rig doesn't presuppose canting keels or hydrofoils for stability. It could be put on a conventional catamaran configuration, for example. But I don't necessarily think it's a good rig for a watercraft because of the downforce if the leeward panel is sheeted out, or the unstable nature of a windward canted rig if the windward panel is sheeted out.

CT 249
12-10-2004, 06:12 AM
Am I being too harsh when I think that Bernard Smith is a bit of a whacko? I've looked at a lot of his stuff and there seems to be repeated examples of some crude rig shoved onto a Canadian canoe and sailed in 4 knot breezes on a lake for an hour. There always seems to be some deep reason why he can't get out and get his creations working. Hell, he's been trying for decades....Surely some time in the last 40 years he's had time to get it all together if the basic ideas were ever going to succeed.

Frank Bethwaite used to try his Smith type boats in front of my house when I was a kid. He describes them in HPS, and points out the basic flaws. He went on to make the HSP which was great buzz to sail.

The planing cat and inclined rig have been tried many. many times, with very little success AFAIK. Lots of people say windsurfers go fast because they derive lift from windward cant, but the rigs are actually very close to vertical most of the time. Hell, look at the pics of Eric setting the new world speed record; his rig is about as upright as he can get it. I have been coached by the Olympic bronze medallist in windsurfers and he got me to stick the rig as vertical as I could. Upwind, when we have the rig raked to windward, boards are less competitive than downwind when the rig sits pretty much vertical (in the sideways plane). On boards we can easily cant our rigs miles to windward; we don't because we know it's slow (as I had driven home to me when I tried short harness lines in the last raceboard nationals.....ohhh the pain and ignominy).

So all that stuff that Smith goes on about......hell, I dunno. It's been tried for decades without success. When theory fails in practise despite many efforts for decades, isn't that an indication that the theory is wrong?

FAST FRED
12-10-2004, 06:19 AM
"When theory fails in practise despite many efforts for decades, isn't that an indication that the theory is wrong"

Perhaps , but the Law of Unintended Consiquences sometines intervenes.

Mr H was all for increrased stability for sail carring power , yet the Cars work by generating small bow waves that can be overcome.

He got FAST boats , but NOT for the reasons he built them for.

GRAND!!


FAST FRED

CT 249
12-10-2004, 06:36 AM
Oh yeah, wasn't knocking Herreshoff....Nat and L Francis were damn smart. Really damn smart.

I was just casting aspersions at Smith.

Skippy
12-10-2004, 12:51 PM
Am I being too harsh when I think that Bernard Smith is a bit of a whacko?

I've looked at a lot of his stuff and there seems to be repeated examples of some crude rig shoved onto a Canadian canoe and sailed in 4 knot breezes on a lake for an hour. There always seems to be some deep reason why he can't get out and get his creations working.

Hell, he's been trying for decades....Surely some time in the last 40 years he's had time to get it all together if the basic ideas were ever going to succeed.

Oh CT, be nice! :) That's funny, Smith does have some goofy ideas. Is he still alive?

The thing about invention is it's better to be crazy than to be narrow-minded. If you have a truly stupid idea, you just stick it in the round file and move on. But if you just keep tweaking the parameters on some old outdated albatross and you never get beyond that, you may wind up never coming up with anything at all. And Smith really was an inventor first, at least in the books of his that I've read. He was making prototypes, not polished commercial designs. Like they say, all pioneers seem nuts at the time, until their crazy ideas are accepted by the mainstream, at which point the ideas suddenly become "obvious".

I think I got the idea of what Smith was trying to do, and I also think it's impossible. He wanted absolute maximum possible speed, and he wanted it on both tacks. The "sailloons" I would agree do seem like a silly idea, but even they have two qualities of a good airfoil: they're light and they have some thickness. The original "flip tackers" didn't work, but a similar design is the Aeroskimmer (http://www.dcss.org/speedweek/aeroskimmer.html), a catamaran with a single canting wing mounted on an A frame. And the 3-point proa-like design was used by Yellow Pages Endeavor (see Radical and Advanced Sailing Vessels (http://foxxaero.homestead.com/indsail.html) or innovoile.free.fr (http://innovoile.free.fr/YPE_e.html)). And foil designs have evolved a lot since the 1960s.

But the basic idea of having a geometry that is somehow ideal for all points of sail on both sides of the wind just seems too hard to me. The proa might be the best solution if you can live with shunting, and the trimaran might be optimal if you had super-ultra-lightweight materials and low-windage ballast that you could suspend as far windward as you needed (kind of like a sailboard with training wheels). But I think one thing Smith's work proves is the old saying that all design is compromise.

And my final objection is his emphasis on equilibrium over stability. I just don't like the idea of relying on hydrofoils generating downward lift when they can be yanked out of the water, and even the canted rig can be dangerous in heavy weather. Do you have any links or references to Bethwaite's work? I'd like to see that.

CT 249
12-10-2004, 04:23 PM
Well, I dunno....I don't think that anyone who has stuck with his own ideas for 50 years (having checked the site) despite a fairly significant lack of success, can be called "open minded". In that time, the dinghies have gone from wooden hiking boats to carbon skiffs, the windsurfers have arrived and gone through enormous changes, cats have been developed into wing masted fliers, conventional keelboats have gone from being S&S designs to Open 60s.

The thing that beats me is that there are thousands of windsurfers out there who COULD easily incline their rigs, like Smith wants us to, and we know it's often slower to do so and never all that much faster. So his theory must be wrong. It's been tried in C Class cats (a US cat and a French one) as well....no success. Both were uncontrollable, as Bethwaite also found. The idea just doesn't work in the real world AFAIK.

There's been an enormous amount of development in all that stuff, much more than "tweaking an albatross". I've been looking at dinghy design pretty seriously, and one thing I notice is that the breakthroughs normally come from people looking around them, keeping in contact with the outer edges of the mainstream, and taking ideas from one area and intelligently applying them to another to create something different and great. The leaps (wings, trapezes, cats, windsurfers) come from people who are willing to look at everything they see, not people who spend 50 years on the vain pursuit of one idea.

I don't know whether Cunningham copied Smith's layout for YPE. By 1959, when Smith launched his first unsuccesful boat, Charlie Cunningham (father of Lindsay) was already a very succesful and innovative designer. His Gwen 12 of 1943 was arguably the world's first "modern" dinghy; lighter than most current boats, trapeze powered, fully-battened sail. Lindsay helped work on the Gwen 12, but he and Charlie moved to cats in the late '40s/early '50s. The Cunninghams were among the leading innovators in cat design for decades, AND designers of many of the best raceboats. While Smith was playing with canoes in drifters on lakes, Lindsay was building 3 stage wing masts and winning the Little America's Cup with the fastest of all small boats.

Bethwaite's work is "High Performance Sailing", which is available in most good bookstores. It's a must-read, although his history can be a bit wonky, and his assessment of cat and windsurfer performance is a bit out. As he says, his experience with Smith's ideas lead him to a study of wind which I find extremely interesting.

Skippy
12-10-2004, 05:29 PM
Well CT, as far as I can tell, I agree with everything you said. I wasn't trying to suggest that nobody else does creative innovation, just that a lot of good new ideas seem stupid at first, so it's dangerous to criticise people just because some of their ideas don't work. In 1899, the US Secretary of Commerce stated his opinion that all possible inventions had already been made and nothing new would be discovered in the future!

And I thought the Smith website was pretty much just historical, not intended to be up to date. It says he's still alive and he's in his 90s! I had tons of fun reading his first book, and learned a lot from it, including the things that I disagreed with. It's the book that got me started, and I found it very interesting. Thanks for the Bethwaite reference, I'll look for it.

brian eiland
12-10-2004, 11:44 PM
That's neat brian. Do you have any idea where I can find a further discussion of these structural stresses? I'm very interested in them, but I still haven't figured them out.

Brian wrote:
Skippy, I think this info is more along the lines of what you were asking about; the stresses in the catamaran structure, verses the A-rig.

....excerpted again from another forum....
Tom Speer writes:
>The biggest problem I see with compliant hull connections is diagonal
>stability. Basically, it has to come from the windward hull, not the
>leeward hull. The windward shroud tension will keep the windward bow in
>the water, but the center of buoyancy of the leeward hull will always be
>at the pivot. So the boat will rotate about a line between the lee hull
>pivot and a point somewhat aft of the windward bow. That's a drastic
>reduction in diagonal stability. I suppose the leeward shroud can keep
>the lee hull from wracking too much. But then it's not really following
>the waves any more.
>
>There's also the issue of pretension in the shrouds to get forestay
>tension. You basically can't, because you'll lift up the sterns. So
>the forestay tension has to come mainly from main sheet tension. This
>may be why you see Amarylis constructed with a strong backbone.
>
>There's a fundamental tradeoff between stability and sensitivity to
>disturbances. I think I'd rather go for stability.

Claas responded:
Not quite. Rig and hulls are totally independent on the Herreshoff
catamarans. Forestay, shroud and mainsheet tensions are transferred not
into the hulls but into an independent and rigid truss system
including the strong backbone to which Tom correctly refers. The hulls
are attached to this with a separate system of trusses and balljoints.
Very complicated stuff.

Having said that, diagonal stability was indeed an issue with the
Herreshoff catamarans, but not a big one. The hull's pivot point was
aft of its center of gravity and as the windward hull began to lift it
would do so stern first requiring one of the crew to go aft on the
windward hull and act as ballast.

For those who are really interested in this, here is a link to the
original patent by Herreshoff which explains everything in detail.

http://v3.espacenet.com/origdoc?DB=EPODOC&IDX=US189459&F=0&QPN=US189459

Fascinating reading, but note you need to be willing to invest some
time if you really want to understand it.

Skippy
12-11-2004, 12:42 AM
...what you were asking about; the stresses in the catamaran structure
...a link to the original patent by Herreshoff which explains everything in detail.

Yes, thanks. I'll be a while reading it.

Skippy
12-11-2004, 10:18 PM
1. ...there would be considerable lee helm. Whether or not that's a problem with a landyacht, I don't know. It may actually be beneficial, in that to have steering you have to place some of the weight on the front wheel. That weight represents side force that's not available from the lee wheel. If the yacht has lee helm, then the front wheel is carrying a sideload in the right direction.

2. If there's no llimit to the stability, there's no limit to the compression.

3. I don't necessarily think it's a good rig for a watercraft because of the downforce if the leeward panel is sheeted out, or the unstable nature of a windward canted rig if the windward panel is sheeted out.
1. That sounds possible, depending a lot on the geometry. If you're not designing for general use, is an asymmetric configuration like YPE feasible?

2. Okay, I get it.

3. I notice that modern twin masts are upright, maybe with a slight tilt inward but not much. That should increase the sail efficiency by decreasing the interaction, and also help tacking from the greater increase in wind helm when the windward sail is sheeted out, since the sails are farther apart. The cat plus twin rig is definately my favorite combination right now for a low-displacement application.


Thanks for your comments Tom, they've been very helpful.

DSmith
12-13-2004, 01:02 AM
Nearly every great inventor through the ages has been called whacko at some stage?

.......31 knots with a soft rig and lots more potential doens't sound too bad for a failed idea.

www.whbs.demon.co.uk/sr2/

Skippy
12-13-2004, 10:53 AM
Cool! Hey! Is that the same group that had a rigid-wing trimaran for a while? And are you part of that group? It looks like they've got some kite technology going there. And they also have an asymmetric geometry, but no need to have the main floatation leeward since the kite sail doesn't heel the boat over.

You know, that's a good question. If all you want to do is set speed records, you're going to stay on a broad reach, right? So why would the rigid wing be so superior to a sail, when the sail saves on weight, especially a nice simple sprit-boom cat rig, and doesn't have to be as flat as a sail designed for sailing close-hauled? Another "whacko" idea that does over 30 knots!

Skippy
12-14-2004, 12:55 PM
...here is a link to the original patent by Herreshoff which explains everything in detail.
Thanks for those links Brian, they're interesting. McIntyre dealt with the torsional stresses even further. He could push the leeward hull forward and the windward hull aft, so the whole boat was shaped like a parallelegram.
That also brought the leeward sail ahead of the shadow of the windward sail. Thanks again.

Steve Clark
12-14-2004, 02:14 PM
It seems to me that the ORMA 60s are tipping their rigs to windward. I think this can be for several reasons.
First the basic angle of heel for those boats is pretty extreme, so they may be just getting the rig back to vertical.
Second, the rig weighs something, so moving its mass to windward adds stability to the boat.
Third, it reduces the projected area, just as heeling to leeward reduces the projected area, but it is probably a better choice because it increases stability instead of reduces it and some portion of the side force will in fact help reduce the displacement of the boat.
It isn't a magic feather, but there are some pretty good reasons to consider it along with other ideas to increase the speed and efficiency of sailing craft.

CT 249
12-14-2004, 07:49 PM
The ORMA 60s used to have 2.5m hydraulic rams, canting the rig by (IIRC, vague memory) 6 degrees, on a boat healing considerably more. The effect on weather helm was considerable, Frank Cammas said. It was noticeable that the boat was an absolute bitch when (prior to a tack) the windward ram was let go and the rig canted to lee.

I think Frank and Nigel Irens and others said that they don't use the rams on short courses.

Skippy; the apparent wind is well forward at a speed of 30 knots. You're actually far from broad reaching, but closer to sailing to windward.

Skippy
12-14-2004, 08:11 PM
the apparent wind is well forward at a speed of 30 knots. You're actually far from broad reaching, but closer to sailing to windward.
I thought point of sail was defined relative to the true wind not apparent wind.
But I see your point, so at those speeds you'll be sheeted in much more and the sail's/wing's angle of attack will still be low.

gonzo
12-14-2004, 08:29 PM
If you read Herreshoff a bit more, he said why the design failed. The race commities banned the boat because it beat everything afloat. Herreshoff made a living from designing and building boats. Since there was no market for a banned from racing boat, he dropped it .

Skippy
12-14-2004, 08:35 PM
Since there was no market for a banned from racing boat, he dropped it .
That's right. McIntyre also had trouble popularizing his design in the 1930s for maybe the same reason but also the depression.
I read that Herreshoff's cat won the one race it was in even though at one point the boat pitchpoled and sat there for several minutes while other boats passed it, then it eventually passed them after recovering.

brian eiland
12-20-2004, 12:55 PM
from Nov 1877, Bristol, RI (courtesy of the Herresoff Marine Museum (http://www.herreshoff.org/frames/mmframe.htm))

It is true that the enormous disparity of speed between the catamaran and an ordinarily built boat is most noticeable when sailing with the wind a little abaft of beam. Sailing to windward is a paradox at best, and a small amount thus gained is a greater triumph than much greater distances gained in the headlong, freewind sailing. Windward sailing is not a weak point of the catamaran. I can, with a good whole sail breeze, beat to windward faster, by a mile an hour at least, than any sailing vessel afloat, or I can beat the WM. R. BROWN, the WM. T. LEE, the SUSIES, DARE DEVIL, or any other boat of that class that can be named, one-quarter, or five miles to their four, under the conditions before mentioned. I’m not making an idle, empty boast. I know well of what I am writing. I have sailed every class of vessel, from the small cat-boat up to the first-class yacht, and their performances are individually familiar to me. And further, if the owners of the boats whose names I have mentioned, want to be practically, convinced of this, that is, of the speed of the windward sailing of the catamaran, the best way for them is to try it on. I shall be only too happy to do so anywhere and at any time.


If, in a catamaran, you are sorely pressed by wind or wave, turn her bow to leeward. There you will find comfort and consolation, so light she is, and presents so little resistance, that the wind blows her along like a bubble floating in the air, We laid to off Point Judith, at seven. for breakfast, after which reinforcement we continued with the wind gradually dying. When off the Connecticut River we decided to steer for the Long Island shore. We had not gone far on that course when the wind hauled back to east and commenced blowing. Now, with the wind cast in Long Island Sound, and blowing a single-reef breeze, it does not take long to kick up a sea, especially with an ebb tide. At least it did not that day, and soon the TARANTELLA commenced to race, lifted, and borne on the crest of a wave, she should shoot forward with incredible speed. We settled away on the peak halyards and made, in effect, a leg-of-mutton sail from the mainsail. This made a very easy rig, and one particularly adapted for off-wind sailing.

And now, whilst we are flying along, with the waves lifting and breaking high under the after tie-beam, let us overhaul another of the alleged failings of the catamaran, to wit: their tendency to turn over endwise or pitchpole. Now, the center of effort of the sails of the TARANTELLA is 14 ‘6” above the waterline. With the wind abaft of beam, the tendency to bury the bows of the hull is quite obvious. This desire to bury forward is corrected, in a measure, first by having more than an ordinarily large jib, which, on account of its inclined position, lifts strongly that part of the boat. Then the midship link, at which point is imparted most of the press of the sails upon the leeward boat, is so placed in relation to the displacement of the hulls that the downward push (to which
the force of the wind on the sails is resolved) presses more toward the stern, so the leeward boat always keeps in good fore-and-aft trim. The trouble then lies only in the lifting of the stern of the windward hull. Of course if you lift the stern of the boat, and thus make the bow bury itself, the effect is just the same, and just as unpleasant as when the bow sinks for want of buoyancy with the trim of the stern where it should be.

Building the catamaran high in the bows cannot remedy this fault in the least degree; the only thing to be done is to take care of the stem, and the bow will take care of itself. Having stationary ballast will keep the stern down, but this is against my principles. I want to have everything about the boat as light as can possibly be; so when the stern of the TARANTELLA looks light, my companion sits on it, and says it is one of the best seats on the whole boat. It is almost always dry, and one gets three a real sense of the speed with which she tears along.

brian eiland
12-20-2004, 01:01 PM
(courtesty of Multihulls Magazine)

Have a look at Amarylis (http://www.runningtideyachts.com/articles/amarylis.html)

Skippy
12-27-2004, 05:44 PM
Bethwaite's work is "High Performance Sailing", which is available in most good bookstores. It's a must-read...
Thanks for that reference CT, I can see why you recommended it. Definately a Racer's Bible.
I've never seen so much space devoted to wind patterns. I probably won't get into it deeply right away,
but I could see it being almost as useful for a cruiser who wants to squeeze another knot or so out of his old tub.
It's also good to see a second opinion on Smith's work, I'll be studying that closely. I like Bethwaite's HSP too.
Again, thanks for the ref.

brian eiland
10-26-2010, 09:48 AM
...And now, whilst we are flying along, with the waves lifting and breaking high under the after tie-beam, let us overhaul another of the alleged failings of the catamaran, to wit: their tendency to turn over endwise or pitchpole. Now, the center of effort of the sails of the TARANTELLA is 14 ‘6” above the waterline. With the wind abaft of beam, the tendency to bury the bows of the hull is quite obvious. This desire to bury forward is corrected, in a measure, first by having more than an ordinarily large jib, which, on account of its inclined position, lifts strongly that part of the boat. Then the midship link, at which point is imparted most of the press of the sails upon the leeward boat, is so placed in relation to the displacement of the hulls that the downward push (to which
the force of the wind on the sails is resolved) presses more toward the stern, so the leeward boat always keeps in good fore-and-aft trim. The trouble then lies only in the lifting of the stern of the windward hull. Of course if you lift the stern of the boat, and thus make the bow bury itself, the effect is just the same, and just as unpleasant as when the bow sinks for want of buoyancy with the trim of the stern where it should be....
I saw where this subject thread was rather old, but there is some old Nat wisdom in it that desires renew light. I referenced this sdubject thread in a posting on my aftmast subject HERE
http://www.boatdesign.net/forums/sailboats/aftmast-rigs-623-22.html#post411428
...so I thought it would be appropriate to ressurect this subject thread for discussion as well.

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