BartW
Well-Known Member
Just daydreaming a bit...!
That's how it usually starts,
you know where daydreaming got me in to
@ rafiki and jfm
very interesting reading / update, thanks !
Just daydreaming a bit...!
That's how it usually starts,
you know where daydreaming got me in to
@ rafiki and jfm
very interesting reading / update, thanks !
And you can reset the centre on the go, if say you have set them at 20kts but want to do a long run at 28 or 10knots (at least I can, becuase Sleipner have shown me the hidden menus)
you could hardly tell the difference with just one stab doing all the work.
Interesting! So that begs the question, why not just have the one fin? .. Less drag hence more mpg.
Guess that the 'zero speed' effect would be less.
Would make the handling and steering a bit odd, with a lot of drag on one side.
Would make the handling and steering a bit odd, with a lot of drag on one side.
Not if the fin was mounted vertically
Unless the single fin was on the centreline, then it would still cause a drag imbalance. However, I'm not sure where this is going, as I don't believe anyone is currently planning to fit 1 stabiliser are they?
Re Farsco
It'll only act as a rudder if the axis of rotation is displaced from the central axis of rotation as a yawing (?) moment is then produced.
if it's mounted on the axis of rotation, then the only effect is to roll the hull as the 2 yawing moments would cancel each other out.
How's this for Fred Drift?
Yup, agreedOtoh, in my experience, when a MoBo is fitted with stabs, they become the second most important equipment - obviously after the whole propulsion chain: engines/props/rudders.
Each to their own, but I wouldn't agree. I do agree that simple stabs work very effectively (I have used them on my brother's boat) but you can get improvements by going "hi-tech" (not that it's THAT high!). Ultimately the performance of a stab is a function of the blade shape/size and how it moves, and modern computing must improve the latter. I have tried 4 different sets of algorithms in my boat and each one feels different, and it is nice to be able to choose the one that feels bestIf I were building a new boat today, I'd rather still fit those, than test any sort of brand new hi-tech gizmo...
Raf
Don't think pitch comes into it? or does it?
Mainly roll is the one i'd be concerned with.
I see what you mean, but I'm not sure that a computerised control is actually necessary.The control of the movement of stab fins at anchor requires more complex algoriths and necessitates some "hi-tech"