Kelpie
Well-Known Member
Where is this actually demonstrated? I can certainly see that its speed usually exceeds the wind speed, but has it actually reached a downwind mark faster than the wind has?
Good question!
Where is this actually demonstrated? I can certainly see that its speed usually exceeds the wind speed, but has it actually reached a downwind mark faster than the wind has?
It was mentioned near the start of the thread.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1BRvYZd81AQ
and
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aJpdWHFqHm0
I refer the Rt. Hon. Gentleman to my post #51.
I find it vaguely depressing to see how many people are claiming the laws of physics and thermodynamics to support their contention that exceeding the windspeed downwind is impossible when it has already been done.
There are lots of good arguments to be had about implementations, efficiency, theoretical limits but the basic idea is beyond any doubt, because it has already been done.
Drifting doesn't count.
I'm afraid not, or at least not quite in that way. Sure, if you have a 10kt tide and a 10kt wind in precisely the same direction you can get a sailing boat released from rest to do something. It will only be transient, though: the steady state result is the boat drifiting downwind and downtide with the sails empty and the rudder useless.
If you want the sails to work steady state then you must have a wind-water speed differential.
OK, it's a flat calm day and the tide is 10kt heading due south. You drift south with it and voila! you have a 10kt apparent wind from the south. Which you can use to sail. Why? Because there is a difference in velocity between wind and water. It wouldn't work in a 10kt northerly wind and it wouldn't work at slack water.
Please give a more understandable response!The underwater bits wouldn't be. That's the point.
No,
Show
US
prove you have seen a boat do better than windspeed straight downwind.
Wow. I didn't find that justification in the videos. However, if the upwind mark was exactly up wind of the finish line, and your figures are correct, then the boat gets over three times wind speed VMG down wind!OK here we go.
This link is to video of the 1st America's cup race which was sailed over a 20-mile upwind/downwind course. The wind speed during the race was 6 knots.
BMW Oracle round the upwind mark at 99 mins 20 secs and cross the finish at 162 mins 34 secs. So, 20 miles in 63 mins 14 secs which I make 18.97 knots.
You have been shown.
OK here we go.
This link is to video of the 1st America's cup race which was sailed over a 20-mile upwind/downwind course. The wind speed during the race was 6 knots.
BMW Oracle round the upwind mark at 99 mins 20 secs and cross the finish at 162 mins 34 secs. So, 20 miles in 63 mins 14 secs which I make 18.97 knots.
You have been shown.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1pSYALWQ-nI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aJpdWHFqHm0
Been done on land. Questions as to whether it can be done on the water, what with the inefficiencies of water propellers compared to wheels.
Threads here:
http://forums.sailinganarchy.com/index.php?showtopic=31824
http://forums.sailinganarchy.com/index.php?showtopic=82175
I just looked at the second link and have to say it was convincing. The principle appears to be different from my own assumptions - the wheels are driving the prop, causing an airmass to react against the wind
No I haven't.
So if they had set off a smoke generator on the stern as they left the up wind mark, the smoke would always remain up wind of the boat.
OK so you can't be bothered to look at the evidence but you really should re-read this thread before making comments like that. No one was claiming that a boat with sails could exceed windspeed while sailing on a dead run. They achieve the VMG by tacking downwind.
Now go back to post 51 where Uber shows how a mechanism can be devised that converts that into motion along the direct line.
Strange as it may seem - (and some have difficulty accepting this). It is possible to devise a wind-driven craft that sail directly downwind faster than the wind. It's been done with models, and in the next few weeks a team in America are planning on demonstrating a man-carring version. They have a website on http://www.fasterthanthewind.org/
Admittedly, this is on land, but it is theoretically possible to do it on water too.