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I agree with Evan -- Harken is way off.
The formula Evan quotes is the same one I quoted above. As I noted, it's been used by Skene (Kinney), Van Dorn, Henderson, Marchaj, and many others. The trouble with the Harken formula is that it doesn't specify a wind speed. Since sheeting force varies with the square of wind speed, that's a vital part of the choice of winch size. If you really expect to carry a full foretriangle at 40 knots, then the Harken formula is fine. That, however, suggests that at ten knots you'll be grossly undercanvassed -- that you could carry sixteen times more sail than you have. Put another way, the difference between a 56 and a 66 is 18% in power. Since the sheeting force varies with wind speed squared, a sail that is easy with a 56 at 20 knots would require a 66 at 21.7 knots. Since this is a very subtle difference, the only way to do this is for you (Glenn) to do the math. Look at the rig you'll be carrying at each wind speed, calculate the sheet loads with the Evan's formula and make a decision. Your naval architect can provide a table of her ability to carry sail at various wind speeds up to bare poles at around sixty knots. Beware, these are probably high -- my experience with several boats, including Swee****er (Swan 57 by Sparkman & Stephens) was that we never carried as much sail as they said we could. We were, of course cruising shorthanded, not racing. For my money, they are far better places to put money in a cruising boat than in big winches. Dee (wife and crew for 37 years) would agree, and she's the one who has to be perfectly happy reefing, tacking, whatever, alone at night, in a blow, without waking me. (I should add, however, that there are limits. The sailor who goes out with grossly undersized winches and tacks by luffing while sheeting, risks breaking the winch or ripping it out of the deck in puffs.) Jim Woodward www.mvfintry.com "Evan Gatehouse" wrote in message ... "Glenn Ashmore" wrote in message ... Here is where I got the formula on the Harken site. About 2/3 down the page: http://www.harken.com/winches/wnchpower.php In this case I think Harken is just off. They use an example of a 300 sq. ft headsail (nearly the size of the genoa on my last boat, a 30' cutter) and conclude you need a 50:1 winch. I don't think so. The winch was a 2 speed 32:1 and was fine. Yes, it was a bit of effort in a stiff breeze - but you could still wind it in. The usual formula for sheet loads is F (lbs) = 0.00431 A(sq. ft) V^2 (knots) There are some frictional losses through sheet blocks but not that much, perhaps 10%. I think 56's would be more than fine for your 505 ft foresail. If they are self tailers, and you use a 2 handled winch handle, they will be a breeze for smaller crew members. by the way in case you were not kidding: 1 N = .0981 kg i.e. about 0.1 kg force or about 0.2 lbs |
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