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Think of a sailing boat as an aircraft on its side. That's what, in
principle, happens and the principals that you have described are the reason that your sail area is greater than your keel. Install some ventilation for the epoxy fumes (5Litres/second/square metre of workspace) and try a nice single malt whiskey - It's a much nicer method of addling the greycells. "Parallax" wrote in message om... Almost mounting my mast so it would be underwater got me thinking (as it should). Why not underwater sails? Force on a sail is proportional to the density of the medium and that makes a 5 knot water current give about 50X the force of a 5 kt air current on the same size sail. This means you could sail across the Gulf Stream with an underwater foil. However, I am not sure where your rudder and centerboard would be, in the air? Could you make a planing boat with an underwater foil taking advantage of the water current? That way you would not be limited to the 1.2Xsqrt(waterline length) in speed anf might get up to absurd speeds. Then again, maybe this idea is the result of breathing epoxy fumes. |
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