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![]() wrote in message oups.com... A question sometimes asked is that if you have a large fan at the stern on a sailboat blowing forward into the sails would that propel the boat forward? The usual answer given is no because the fan blowing air forward would produce momentum propelling the boat backwards. This would swamp the effect of an effective wind acting on the sails. But suppose instead you had the fan in front blowing rearward into the sails? In this case the momentum would propel the boat forward. Furthermore by using the method of tacking into the wind, the wind blowing into the sails could produce a force with a forward component as well. Then the acceleration forward should be higher than that produced by the momentum flow of the fan alone. The speed could also be higher than the speed of the air created by the fan since tacking into the wind can give you a higher speed than the wind speed. Would this work? Bob Okay, here's what you do: Install a high-efficiency air compressor belowdecks. Connect this to a modified luff foil into which precisely sized holes have been drilled at an angle which allows for maximum efficiency of turbulated airflow across both the back and front of the sail, with the speed at the back being greater than that at the front (precise differential you will have to calculate yourself for your specific sail). Do this for all sails. Report back. :-) Karin Conover-Lewis Rawson 30 ketch "Escapade" Marinette WI |
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