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I was thinking the drums were perfect cylinders. Maybe not, but I thought
the principle was that wind past the rotating surface created a pressure differntial. Makes sense, but I can't think there would be much resulting force. I might drive up there some dreary day to find what happened to her. "Larry" wrote in message ... "Garland Gray II" wrote in news:zD5kf.26955$ih5.3190@dukeread11: Larry, Are you talking about that trimaran with the rotating vertical cylinders ? I saw that (at least was told it was Cousteau's) at a marina up the Chickahominy R off the James R in VA maybe 8 years ago. Don't think it's there now. Yeah, that's the one. Has like 4 rotating cylinder sails that catch wind from any direction to power the boat. The vanes in it look like and S if you look down from the top of it. There was a great documentary made of it, but I can't find it. |
#2
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"Garland Gray II" wrote in
news:PC7kf.26965$ih5.11538@dukeread11: I was thinking the drums were perfect cylinders. Maybe not, but I thought the principle was that wind past the rotating surface created a pressure differntial. Makes sense, but I can't think there would be much resulting force. I might drive up there some dreary day to find what happened to her. No, the "vanes" are, looking at them from the end, cup shaped between the outer and center, I think. It would make sense if the shape of each of them were a vertical wing on Bernoulli's Principal with lift as it goes by the proper wind angle for lift (rotation power). |
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