BartW
Well-Known Member
Sad picture to see the Costa ship lying there like that.
yes indeed,
especially while knowing that there are still some victims inside,
and all these private belongings of 4000 people
Sad picture to see the Costa ship lying there like that.
And a typical local dish prepared by Alfonso
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Sleipner estimate that the stabs are 100hp of drag at 20kts. At 20kts my engines read 65% loaded and that's roughly 2000hp out of 3144hp max, so the stabs are 5% drag say. Hence my 16.5 and 18 l/nm would be say 15.6 and 17 without stabs
I would say 5% is a fair price to pay for the huge benefit of stabs, so fitting some on BA would be a great idea imho
I very much doubt that such boat was originally built with the stabs.how could they know
The sleipners do not cost 10% on top speed. Fairline have seatrial test data on every Sq78, ie 79 boats launched, 2 of which have Sleipner stabs, and they show a top speed loss of about 1 knot. Princess report the same based on 10 or so sleipner installs on their 72 and 78 (V and fly)Idrag from the stabilisers is 0.3kn he claims (this is a bit optimistic I think, how could they know)
so the boats are compare-able, and a perfermance loss of about >10% can be expected ?
or are Sleipner stabs so mùch better![]()
The sleipners do not cost 10% on top speed. Fairline have seatrial test data on every Sq78, ie 79 boats launched, 2 of which have Sleipner stabs, and they show a top speed loss of about 1 knot. Princess report the same based on 10 or so sleipner installs on their 72 and 78 (V and fly)
It would be interesting to speak with whoever owned the boat when the stabs were installed.
Nope, it definitely isn't. As anything drag-related, the effect is rather exponential.I assume that drag is almost a lineair function from speed ?
interesting !
at what top speed is that ?
do they have test data at cruising speed,
or at 20kn ?
I assume that drag is almost a lineair function from speed ?
interesting !
at what top speed is that ?
do they have test data at cruising speed,
or at 20kn ?
I assume that drag is almost a lineair function from speed ?
if you double the speed, you much more than double the drag.
Well, I still don't see the point in reducing the pleasure time...
...even more so when you think that you could make it at 4,6 l/nm, as we recently did in a similar size/weight boat!
The actual curve obviously depends on each hull, but in principle, if you double the speed, you much more than double the drag.
Yup, agreed. By "as anything drag-related", I meant any sort of u/w gear.Only for the appendages MapisM, not the hull surface which is waterskiing
Though I suspect that it would still take more than double of the horsepower to push a Sq78 at 60kts... But that's just a wild guess.
Agreed! You would have a cubed-law on the appendage drag, or you could Arneson it, plus at 70mph you begin to get some (2-300hp maybe) air resistance unlike at 20kts. Yup, you'd want 8000hp rather than 2x2x1600hp. For my next project MapisM...
I'm mainly interested in efficiency loss at slower speed, 20kn
in stead of double speed 60kn.
just discussed here with my eldest son, (5th year at univ for civil engineer)
he thinks that the appendage drag is mainly friction,
and friction is a complex curve, but in a certain range, linear for 2 different speeds....
(but he has little interest in my hobby, so might not have put all his brain power on it)
Surface drives and 70mph? Now that would be a setup deserving the name Match 2...For my next project MapisM...
Surface drives and 70mph? Now that would be a setup deserving the name Match 2...
Looking forward to the new thread!
At 20kts I'd work on 100hp loss. On 2x 1200hp motors, that's just about significant.