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I may not be a sailing expert (although I have fooled the British
Government, most of the sail training organizations in the U.S., and the U.S. Coast Guard into thinking so) but I was very intrigued by the balance issue in my early years. The centerboard and rudder comprise just about the whole lateral plane on a dinghy. If you remove the centerboard from a dinghy with a hinged board and put in a temporary dagger boat, you can make huge adjustments in the location of the lateral plane. If you study the effect on rudder angle under controlled conditions you can learn some very interesting things. The racing adjustments you are talking about certainly are real and do work. The difference is one of perspective. When attempting to eke out very small increments of performance these small reductions in rudder angle and helm force are significant. You may even see yourself picking up enough speed, maybe .03%, to close the angle on the boat next to you. It's sort of like a lot of sail trim adjustments. Pulling the Cunningham will speed up a racing boat under some circumstances but it will not convert a "slow" cruising boat into a "fast" one. These small changes observed while racing are not the same thing though as the differences between boats that are considered to have weather helm over a broad range of conditions and ones that are considered well balanced. You are also not changing the crude geometric C.E. / C.L.P. relationships very much but other critical aerodynamic aspects of the sail plan that are not considered in the paper on a pin approach. -- Roger Long "Wayne.B" wrote in message ... On Tue, 03 Jan 2006 05:03:00 GMT, Gary wrote: Careful. The chap you are preaching to is the Chaplain. Google Roger Long before you get to far into this. I should have. =========================================== I'm aware that Roger is an experienced marine architect but that does not necessarily make him a sailing expert. I have spent literally thousands of hours racing keel boats (with some success), so I'm fairly comfortable discussing what has worked for me. I think we all agree that reducing heel angle will help to reduce weather helm but there are various ways of doing that. |
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