MinorSwing
Well-Known Member
A22 averages something over 7 knots and is comfortable in an F11. I assume that for 9+ and comfort in a category 2 hurricane you'd probably need the extra 4 feet.
Nothing is comfortable in a F11.
A22 averages something over 7 knots and is comfortable in an F11. I assume that for 9+ and comfort in a category 2 hurricane you'd probably need the extra 4 feet.
The true speed a boat sails at is the one used for passage planning!
On my 36 Dufour it was 5.5 kts but only 2kts against a headwind.
I then bought a 38 Dufour and learnt to sail only with the wind ( gentlemen don't beat) and passage planning was 6 kts.
On the 43 Jeanneau it is about 6.5kts.
For these speeds I am assuming the 60ml to Cherbourg etc not the spot speed you get for 15 min with favourable conditions but then I am probably a **** sailor in spite of 20 yrs racing a Wayfarer.
I sail a awb of 40 feet. I usually get her up to seven knots quite easily say in a F4/5 and I'm chuffed when I get over eight knots, top speed so far is 8.7 knots, this is boat speed using the log not gps.
I was recently talking with someone who sails a 27 ft boat and said that he regularly gets over nine knots. I suggested that that must include tide, but he said no, that was from his log.
Now either I'm doing something wrong or he needs to recalibrate his log?
What sort of speeds should I expect?
Nothing is comfortable in a F11.
Your figures seem pretty well spot on for your boat.
I blogged on this subject here:http://www.saltyjohntheblog.com/2015/02/displacement-hull-speed-2.html
(I defer to Grumpy o.g's hugely superior knowledge of hydrodynamics and apologise for using 'climb its own bow wave' to describe the moment the displacement hull hits the wall).
Nothing is comfortable in a F11.
In my esteemed opinion, anyone who wories about boat speed in a yacht, is in the wrong sport, cept racing yachts.
I think differently - from my perspective- When ever i sail I do so to get the maximum from the boat in respect of speed .I do it because I like to think that I am sailing well.That being said i would not be slow to reef & do not carry the cruising chute that much.
But I still strive to get the best speed & consider that a part of sailing. Just sailing slowly when I could be sailing faster just does not seem right to me. That has nothing to do with racing.
When i first bought my yacht i struggled to get 6.0Kts upwind. A world champion came aboard & stuck it straight on 6.5 kts & kept it there. I want to achieve the same sort of skill- eventually
I beg to differ. I always find the interior of a pub very comfortable in an F11, as long as it's above any tidal surge.
No-one, least of all me, would ever claim the A22 had been comfortable in F11, just that she always seemed likely to survive when we found ourselves in those unforecast breezes; bit of a difference...![]()
A typical displacement hull has to go onto the plane after the wave it generates exceeds the hull length - this is the "climbing onto the bow wave" often wrongly referred to - it's not that you're trying to force the boat uphill at all - the rules of physics mean that a fluid is fairly easy to move around within certain constraints. An analogy is perhaps like trying to make something vibrate outside it's natural resonant frequency - you're making matter behave in a way nature doesn't want you to. It takes huge amounts of energy to make it move outside those constraints because you're now trying to compress the fluid as well as move it (okay, simplistic but effectively the faster you drive a displacement hull the more you compress the fluid it is travelling through).
Don't the rules of physics state that a fluid is incompressible? As you acknowledge, fluids are fairly easy to move around, so it just gets "pushed" out of the way - or in this case built up into a larger wave. As a displacement hull hits, then exceeds 'hull speed', the stern drops into the trough and the bow pushes up against the bow-wave - at this point form drag has increased as the relatively small surface area of the bow has been supplanted by the larger bottom, as the boat is pushed essentially keel-first into the water. If the engine can be tilted this could be maintained and speed could even be increased just by throwing more power at it to overcome the drag. But most vessels produce thrust roughly parallel to the design WL, so as a lesser component of thrust is available to push through the water, more is being applied downward - acting opposite to gravity. To plane, the vessel then has to overcome the gravity and climb up over the bow-wave. As that occurs, the effective frontal area decreases, thus decreasing drag - speed increases. On plane there's bugger all form drag, and wetted surface area is minimized. What keeps a vessel on plane is that the incompressible liquid provides a lift component - essentially climbing the now tiny wave (I'd call it a bow-wave, but it's usually moved well aft of the bow).
Yes, you're trying to compress rather than compressing. I still don't agree you're trying to climb the bow wave though. Imagine you've put a trolley jack at the front of your car and raised it up but then try and drive it along (assuming the trolly jacks has wheels). The front of the car may be raised but it's not trying to go uphill. If the wave was stationary then yes you'd be trying to climb up it but it actually moves with the boat so there's no energy expended trying to overcome the force of gravity by making the boat go upwards - all that energy is used in moving the water.
Dont know about what speeds you could expect but I do know you can expect a lot of wishfull thinking in replies to your post.
Thanks all, I've come to the conclusion that he'd fitted his log upside down!