jfm
Well-Known Member
if you must apply a trasversal force to the hull (=stab fins) to contrast the wave force which would make the boat roll, the more "longitudinally neutral" such force is, the better.
Aty first sight, that makes sense to me, on an amateur basis. If the stabs are, say, lifting the port side to stop a roll you dont want them also lifting the port quarter and stuffing the stbd bow downwards.
BUT, I think to stop a roll like that, the port stab will lift the port side and the stbd stab will sink the stbd side. Then the upward lift component of the port stab on the aft port quarter (caused by the stab being located aft of the LN point) is perfectly offset by the downward push by the stbd stab on the starboard quarter, hence it all cancels out (though with more drag). Get my drift? In which case it would seen that being not quite at the LN point is no problem, apart from some drag.
I'm not sure - just guessing here
But all that said, you have to fit them in the engine room on a boat like the Aq74, and if they are therefore a metre too far aft (of the strictly "correct" position) it probably makes little discernable difference
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