knuterikt
Well-Known Member
Yes. Or indeed if you gained the same SA with a longer luff (P) and the same boom length (E).
For the same sail area with a larger roach you've got a greater effective SA.
The reason is you get tip vortices from the top of the sail. One way of thinking about that is that it negates a large part of the area of the head of the sail. There's a good diagram in one of CA Marchaj's books that explains it very well - probably dodgy to photocopy it and attach it but Fig 75 on P93 of "Sail Performance" if you can get a copy from the library. All books on aerohydrodynamics of yachts should describe it in a good level of detail though. I've flicked through Fabio Fossati's book but could find such a suitable diagram.
Thanks for the explanation.
I got curios because I don't think that NOR rating http://www.norlys.org/ use information about battens when calculating the rating.
NOR rating (formerly NOR lys) started to use the ORC VPP system this year, and It does not look like ORC have any information about battens in the database.
But the sail measures give numbers for the roach in the way they are taken.