dylanwinter
Well-Known Member
Be gentle with me chaps for I am but a poorly trained agricultural engineering graduate and I should not stray too far into fluid dynamics for fear on incurring some sort of brain jam
I am writing something about Centaurs for Classic Sailor
http://classicsailor.com/
so I had a look at the yachtsnet pages
http://www.yachtsnet.co.uk/archives/westerly-centaur/westerly-centaur.htm
where it says that the keels are shaped like foils with a toe in of two degrees
does anyone know what that ends up in inches?
did westerly use the same keel castings and toe in right through the production run?
Yachtsnet also says
"The sailing performance is helped by carefully designed bilge keels which are handed port and starboard with a two degree toe-in, so that once the boat heels under sail the more vertical leeward keel is developing lift to windward."
that may be true but it is also attempting to trip the boat up while the toed in windward keel is attempting to bury itself. If you let a Centaur heel too much that windward keel comes too close to the surface and starts to cavitate and gurgle turning poor old LGs tank tested physics to go to hell . On the helm it feels as though you have caught a mooring bouy and then the boat starts to try to stall out. Upwind Centaurs are fine as long as you keep them flat - that means either playing the mainsheet of stuffing her into the gusts just like an overpowered dinghy. My son is a laser sailer and had her going to windward beautifully by playing the mainsail. I am an old bloke so I tend to roll away a little bit of genoa or main and sail her flatter but slower.
However, I have noticed that when a Centaur is going down hill with the wind up her chuff that toe in makes her sit down in the water - the opposite of a foiling cat or moth.
That does give them a feeling of stability as the hull settles deep in the water at four knots.
I assume she is moving more water than a boat with toe out - or is she?
. I am not sure exactly what toe in brings to the table and do non westerlies have them?
I believe the macwesters have no toe in. Has anyone saled both a 26 and a centaur.
The seawych has almost vertical keels.
incidentally
I am still missing the mark 2 rudder. Centaur 1 was good to sail - Centaur 2 is rather more pudding like in the feel on the tiller so if you are in the market for a second hand centaur and you care at all for the feeling on the tiller - get one with the stub and more balanced rudder. Just an opinion from an old Sonata and E boat sailor who now sails clonky old Centaurs.
D
I am writing something about Centaurs for Classic Sailor
http://classicsailor.com/
so I had a look at the yachtsnet pages
http://www.yachtsnet.co.uk/archives/westerly-centaur/westerly-centaur.htm
where it says that the keels are shaped like foils with a toe in of two degrees
does anyone know what that ends up in inches?
did westerly use the same keel castings and toe in right through the production run?
Yachtsnet also says
"The sailing performance is helped by carefully designed bilge keels which are handed port and starboard with a two degree toe-in, so that once the boat heels under sail the more vertical leeward keel is developing lift to windward."
that may be true but it is also attempting to trip the boat up while the toed in windward keel is attempting to bury itself. If you let a Centaur heel too much that windward keel comes too close to the surface and starts to cavitate and gurgle turning poor old LGs tank tested physics to go to hell . On the helm it feels as though you have caught a mooring bouy and then the boat starts to try to stall out. Upwind Centaurs are fine as long as you keep them flat - that means either playing the mainsheet of stuffing her into the gusts just like an overpowered dinghy. My son is a laser sailer and had her going to windward beautifully by playing the mainsail. I am an old bloke so I tend to roll away a little bit of genoa or main and sail her flatter but slower.
However, I have noticed that when a Centaur is going down hill with the wind up her chuff that toe in makes her sit down in the water - the opposite of a foiling cat or moth.
That does give them a feeling of stability as the hull settles deep in the water at four knots.
I assume she is moving more water than a boat with toe out - or is she?
. I am not sure exactly what toe in brings to the table and do non westerlies have them?
I believe the macwesters have no toe in. Has anyone saled both a 26 and a centaur.
The seawych has almost vertical keels.
incidentally
I am still missing the mark 2 rudder. Centaur 1 was good to sail - Centaur 2 is rather more pudding like in the feel on the tiller so if you are in the market for a second hand centaur and you care at all for the feeling on the tiller - get one with the stub and more balanced rudder. Just an opinion from an old Sonata and E boat sailor who now sails clonky old Centaurs.
D