The engineer
Well-Known Member
Now that would make an interesting poll
Try reading what I actually asked.
The power that drives your boat through the water is the difference in velocity between the water and the air.
Agree or disagree?
This is effectively what is measured by the "True Wind" display on your raymarine instruments. I also call this True wind.
What do you call it?
True wind is the wind that would be experienced if your vessel was stationary with respect to the earth, NOT if it is stationary wrt the water.
Try reading what I actually asked.
The power that drives your boat through the water is the difference in velocity between the water and the air.
Agree or disagree?
This is effectively what is measured by the "True Wind" display on your raymarine instruments. I also call this True wind.
What do you call it?
I guess I'll add another instrument manufacturer that disagrees with you: NKE
Every instrument I've seen that calculates True Wind (speed, direction, angle), does it with reference to the log ie speed through the water. Including my NKE system.
Although I knew this would be affected by tidal flow, I had not known, until this thread, that there was another name for sailors to use for reference against the ground (ie a stationary object).
Without wishing to appear rude it is becoming easy to understand why
The statement that the 'power' that is available to move the boat is the difference between air speed and water speed seems to be a little simplistic, but I can see where you are coming from. Again though I do not find this helpful, either as a thought exercise or practically.
Quick question for those who think true wind is irrelevant - how do you estimate what the wind is going to do on the next leg of a passage?
No-one disagrees that this is what yachting instrument manufacturers label 'true wind'. That stems IMO from the historical fact that boat speed was all that was available to add to the computation in the past. True wind ('true' true wind) has now apparently been renamed 'ground wind' by them. That does not however make it right.
- W
Maybe it doesn't make it right. But like it or not the definition of 'true wind' has changed from what you understand it to be. Language has evolved again and there are new words, terms and phrases to learn.
I can understand where the rest of your post comes from - even if I disagree, and am surprised that you don't have a name for the most useful measure of wind.
But I'm not sure why this is simplistic? In what other way does your boat garner power, other than the difference between those two velocities?
Oh, and I could reference any number of racing guides as sources supporting my definitions of ground wind, true wind and apparent wind, but for some reason they don't offer their content up for free on the internet! Must be some sort of money making weeze. If you make it to Southampton, grab a copy of pretty much any racing guide and have a look.
Surely the force produced by the sails and boat's windage is a function of the delta between the boat's speed and air speed and the angle between the airflow and the durfaces (angle of attack), and nothing to do with the water velocity?
I'm intrigued by this new definition of true wind.
I'm sorry, it must be early, but I don't really understand that. The available power to your sails has a lot to do with water velocity, since your boat "grips" the water not the land.
So if you are on a reach, but the tide is pushing you directly to windward, you will feel an increase in windspeed from the ground wind, and be able to sail through the water faster than if there was no tide.
And if the tide was taking you downwind, there would be less wind than ground wind and you would be sailing slower.
And that tide alters the velocity of the boat, which is what is making the difference, not the tide itself. The actual water velocity may affect the boat's velocity but it's the boat's velocity relative to the airflow that will affect the force produced.
Given that different boat's will be affected differently by the current in the real world because of keel depth, inertia, etc. I'd say that's quite an important distinction.
All boats are affected equally by tide.