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Dave Schneider
 
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I forgot to mention that the wing has shrouds and a forestay, probably
around the 8 ft mark. CE is around 6 ft.


"ddinc" wrote in message
...
If you give me the sail CE height from the ground,
I can add the sail compression load. Is there a forestay?
Height?


"ddinc" wrote in message
...
Assuming chain plate base =plank: 14 ft

500 lb. x 7 ft. = (vertical chainplate load) lbs x 14 ft.
max mast load compression =vertical chainplate load
max mast load compression= 250 lbs.

There is more going on here, but I need spreader information.

"Dave Schneider" wrote in message
...
Does anyone have advise on how to calculate mast/sail loads? This is
actually for a solid wing ice boat, but I think if I can understand
traditional mast/sail loads, it should translate to my application. I
don't think aircraft design is applicable here, especially G-forces.

The
key point for boats vs. airplanes is that you can only apply so much
force,
and then the boat will start to capsize and spill the air. For sake of
example here are some parameters:
weight: 500lbs
sail area: 50 square feet
center of effort on sail (wing): 6 ft high
(7ft from hull to runner)
estimated speed (if it matters): 80mph

I don't know how to figure this out with an equation, but by simply
examining movement distances of the CE and hull, it appears that the

sail
has a mechanical advantage so the load on the sail would never reach

500
lbs. I also have to account for loads encountered in a gust.

Am I on the right track here? Can anyone recommend some reading on

this
matter?

Thanks for any assistance,
Dave