RobbieH
Well-Known Member
Hi,
I have a Windpilot Pacific on my Dufour Arpege. I've been using it on and off for 5-^ years now on annual cruises around the Nsea, Channel and Baltic. We were sailing back along the Dutch coast recently, shallow water, beam swell of about 1.5-2 meters and about 25 knots of wind just abaft the beam, maybe 30 knots in gusts. Hi clewed jib (clew around about level with fwd lowers) and 2 reefs in the main.
The boat was fine but there was a lot of yawing, coming over the crest of the swell the boat would head up and then fall off as the windvane did its thing. Tendency to overcorrect downwind and then in the next gust/crest she would head up again.
It didn't seem very efficient compared to handsteering. When hand steering I didn't notice objectionable amounts of weather helm.
In the Windpilot blurb they talk about "automatic yaw damping using a 360 degree bevel gear". I don't understand how/why this performs yaw damping can someone enlighten me?
Does adjusting the windvane sensor (the plywood vane) tilt angle help with this? Tilting it further back so it takes less input from the wind?
I won't be able to play with this until next season but if anyone has any ideas how to reduce the yawing ("corkscrewing" might be another good word for it) I'd welcome some input.
I have a Windpilot Pacific on my Dufour Arpege. I've been using it on and off for 5-^ years now on annual cruises around the Nsea, Channel and Baltic. We were sailing back along the Dutch coast recently, shallow water, beam swell of about 1.5-2 meters and about 25 knots of wind just abaft the beam, maybe 30 knots in gusts. Hi clewed jib (clew around about level with fwd lowers) and 2 reefs in the main.
The boat was fine but there was a lot of yawing, coming over the crest of the swell the boat would head up and then fall off as the windvane did its thing. Tendency to overcorrect downwind and then in the next gust/crest she would head up again.
It didn't seem very efficient compared to handsteering. When hand steering I didn't notice objectionable amounts of weather helm.
In the Windpilot blurb they talk about "automatic yaw damping using a 360 degree bevel gear". I don't understand how/why this performs yaw damping can someone enlighten me?
Does adjusting the windvane sensor (the plywood vane) tilt angle help with this? Tilting it further back so it takes less input from the wind?
I won't be able to play with this until next season but if anyone has any ideas how to reduce the yawing ("corkscrewing" might be another good word for it) I'd welcome some input.