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Alan Baker
 
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Default Sailing against the wind depends on airfoil shape?

In article ,
(Axel Boldt) wrote:

Hi,

I'm trying to understand how a boat can sail against the wind.
Explanations on the internet usually go like this: "The sail has an
airfoil shape, the air goes faster on one side than on the other,
creating lift by Bernouilli's principle." But I know that for flying
planes, the wing's airfoil shape is not essential (otherwise planes
couldn't fly on their back): it's the angle of attack that matters. So
I'm wondering if the same is true for sailing: would it be possible to
sail against the wind with a sail that's a rigid flat surface, not an
airfoil-shaped piece of cloth?

Thanks,
Axel


Sure. Just not very well.

--
Alan Baker
Vancouver, British Columbia
"If you raise the ceiling 4 feet, move the fireplace from that wall
to that wall, you'll still only get the full stereophonic effect
if you sit in the bottom of that cupboard."