T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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801.1 | who knows? | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed Apr 20 1988 15:02 | 14 |
| Accurate quantitative data would be virtually impossible to obtain other
than by tank testing, and I haven't seen any published reports. Racers
strive for an ultra smooth bottom on the theory (I suppose) that it won't
hurt and might just help, but whether the difference is .001 or .01 or
0.1 knot is anybody's guess. Unless you have a folding or feathering
propeller, flush thru-hull fittings, carefully faired bottom and keel,
etc, a really smooth, shiny bottom isn't worth the extra effort. I'd
suggest that as long as the old bottom paint is smooth (no flaking or
pits) just rolling on another coat with a roller after a light sanding
will result in a fine bottom finish. But then I loathe sanding and
painting bottoms.
Alan
|
801.2 | MICRON CSC | CIMNET::SCIACCA | | Wed Apr 20 1988 18:21 | 13 |
| Micron CSC is brand new this year, so noone is likely to have any
empirical data on how well it works. I am in the middle of applying
it right now, and I can tell you one very serious problem with it
in April in New England- it must be applied when the temperature
for the next 16 hours, while it dries, is over 50 degrees. Monday
morning I barely made the window between the temperature rising
enough and the rain starting. And it needs three coats.
On the other hand, I used Micron 33 on my old boat, and it was
wonderful not to have to worry about painting it at all for four
years.
TOM
|
801.3 | | MILVAX::HO | | Wed Apr 20 1988 18:53 | 14 |
| It's partly dependent on the hull form. Low wetted surface hulls
notice the detrimental effects of roughness much more so than heavy
displacement full keel ones.
Ditto for the effects of slime. For a sleek hull, the slightest
bit is noticeable.
I'm convinced that at sailboat speeds there is no such thing as
a self polishing bottom paint.
A clean bottom is like a waxed car. Those who like it, do it.
- gene ho
|
801.4 | | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Wed Apr 20 1988 18:58 | 35 |
| I have Micron 44. Used it last season. Before that I used Micron
33.
The 44 is the closest cousin to CSC as far as I can tell. Even
International recommends CSC as the no-tin replacement for 44.
As for results...I think 33 is probably better for boats that
stay under 8-10 knots and spend a lot of time in still water.
The slime flushed off the hull quicker with the 33 than the 44.
It was also quite evident that the 33 was doing what it is supposed
to because the bottom came out extremely smooth at the end of the
season. The 44 seemed to slime up at the same rate as the 33 but
it took either a scrub brush (the 33 would be completely removed
with a scrub brush) or some fast sailing and a couple hours to
have the slime flush itself off. At the end of last season the
44 still showed the brush marks of application, which makes me
believe it erroded very little over the season. I wont know if
that is good or bad untill this year.
I would hope that the CSC has been formulated to erode at a rate
somewhere between 33 and 44.
By the way, I hate sanding bottoms too. That is what appealed to
me first about the copolymers.
I have a question too. They referred to 33 and 44 as Copolymers,
but the term ablating is being used this year. It appears the
term ablating applies to the paint type known as copolymer but
I am not sure copolymer applies to paints like CSC. Does anyone
know how they are binding the ablating paint and copper oxide in
the new copper paints like CSC?
Walt
|
801.5 | ...according to Webster: | ECADSR::FINNERTY | | Thu Apr 21 1988 08:51 | 12 |
|
re .-1
Ablation: n. 1 removal, as by surgical amputation.
2 a wearing away, as of rock
So, you see, your hull will wear away either by amputation or
by rocks... maybe you ought to try a different kind of paint!
;-)
|
801.6 | more than you wanted to know | CLT::FANEUF | | Thu Apr 21 1988 09:32 | 72 |
| On the resistance of hulls -
There are two major components of resistance for displacement hulls;
friction drag and wave-making drag. Wave-making drag is due to the
wave train generated by the motion of the hull through the water.
As speed increases, the contribution of this component also increases.
For displacement (non-planing) hulls this reaches a limiting maximum
at so-called 'hull speed', where the bow wave has approximately
the same length as the boat's waterline length. At this point the
boat is essentially digging a hole in the water, and can't go faster
unless it can begin planing. For traditional displacement sailboats,
hull speed (in knots) is between 1.2 and 1.5 times the square root
of the waterline length (we've all heard this one).
Friction drag is largely a function of wetted surface, although
other factors intrude. For a given wetted surface, smoothness has
an noticeable effect, although it's not exactly what you might think.
What really matters is the thickness of the boundary layer which
is entrained by the surface as the hull passes through the water,
and whether flow in the boundary layer is laminar or turbulent.
The boundary layer is a layer of water in which the local velocity
of the water varies between the velocity of the hull itself (i.e.
right at the hull surface) and the resting velocity (relatively
0) of the undisturbed water. In a sense, the boat is dragging much
of the water entrained in the boundary layer along with it (one
way to compute friction drag is to attempt to compute the enery
imparted to the water in the boundary layer). The effect of smooth
bottom paints is to reduce the thickness of the boundary layer,
thus the extremes to which racers go to both reduce wetted surface
and have slick bottoms.
It's not all that simple. By many estimates, dolphins exhibit the
lowest boundary layer resistance of anything which moves fast in
the water, and they don't have smooth, slick skins. On a fine level,
their skins are stippled and flexible. Researchers are still trying
to figure out how they do it...
For large vessels (ships) boundary layers may be 1-2 feet thick.
For boats in our familiar sizes, they are probably more like 1-2
inches. Another factor is whether flow in the boundary layer is
laminar (smooth) or turbulent (boiling and burbling around). To
confuse things, sometimes turbulent flow means lower drag, sometimes
laminar flow does. Essentially, laminar flow is desirable at low
speeds and turbulent flow is desirable at higher speeds (because
it reduces boundary layer thickness).
A third factor in drag is the effect of appendages. These are small
contributors in large vessels, but major contribuors in small ones.
The effect of a non-folding propeller is much greater than any
variation in drag causes by different bottom finishes (although
the effect of fouling may be greater). The effect of unfairness,
square corners, and poorly tapered trailing edges would usually
be included in this factor. Note, by the way, that squared-off trailing
edges on rudders and keels (which you may find in some traditional
designs) contribute a surprising amount of resistance due to the
large vortices which they create.
Up to about 1/2 hull speed, the major contributor to resistance
in our boats is friction drag. Its importance diminishes thereafter,
and may only be about 20-30% at hull speed. The quality of bottom
finish is in fact more imporant for cruising boats than it is for
racers because they have more surface area (or they should). It's
just that there are so many other contributions to going slow that
it often seems unimportant. These include high-drag appendages,
hull forms which generate lots of wave-making resistance, and a
more casual attitude towards fouling. I would go for the smoothest
bottom finish I could stand working towards which offers good
anti-fouling protection.
Ross Faneuf (B.S. Naval Architecture MIT, many years ago)
|
801.7 | nope, I want to know even more... | ECADSR::FINNERTY | | Thu Apr 21 1988 14:48 | 22 |
|
re .-1
ok, making the hull smoother reduces frictional drag by reducing
the thickness of the boundary layer, and this is increasingly
important the lower the velocity through the water.
but can you quantify this? what is the effect (in knots) with a
25' waterline in a 10 knot breeze, no prop in the water, with:
a) a crudely finished bottom, showing brushmarks in all direction,
paint cracks here & there, and a gauge or two, vs
b) a glistening, hard undercoat worthy of America's Cup competition
the question is largely rhetorical since I doubt anyone has hard
data on this, but what's your best guess about the difference in
speed, close-hauled, and the ability to point into the wind?
- Jim
|
801.8 | guesses | CLT::FANEUF | | Thu Apr 21 1988 15:53 | 24 |
| I don't have any hard data; it may exist, but I haven't tried to
find it. At a guess, the difference between a good, smooth bottom
and gonzo supergloss racing is small - .1 or .2 knots. One or two
gouges is probably unnoticeable. The difference between a hard bottom
paint and a traditional soft one is probably some fraction of a
knot, don't dare guess how much. A foul bottom (some small weed,
a few small barnacles showing up) is probably .5-1 knot. A big,
three-bladed non-feathering prop is probably nearly a knot
It's probably worth spending some attention on bottom smoothness,
fairness of appendages, and clean trailing edges on things. I wouldn't
be suprised to see it give you .5 knots or even a little more in
moderate breezes. These things probably mean the most whenever your
rig isn't supplying enough power to overcome these deficits - like
in the moderate breezes which are a steady diet in New England during
the summer. I wouldn't be a fanatic unless you race. The same kind
of attention to your sails and rig is probably equally productive,
like acquiring a boom vang to reduce mainsail twist if you don't
have one, or getting a tired sail recut to put the draft back where
it belongs.
Ross Faneuf
|
801.9 | Non toxic paints | CSSE::COUTURE | Abandon shore | Fri Apr 22 1988 09:38 | 5 |
| As long as we're on the subject, does anyone know anything about
the new super-slick paints being developed (according to PS) that
work without toxins. Supposedly, the little beasties can't get
a grip on the slick surface.
|
801.10 | Lots of ways | AYOU17::NAYLOR | Purring on all 12 cylinders | Mon Apr 25 1988 07:05 | 21 |
| Two years ago I chrtered a boat in Yugoslavia and it had the hairiest
bottom I've seen for many a year. The reduction is speed was
*phenomenal*!! The boat was unable to keep up with the same type
of boat which was clean when mine had full sails up and broad reaching
and the other boat was on fully reefed jib and one slab in the main!!
A smooth bottom for me any time.
On non-toxic anti-foulings ; I remember a few years ago seeing for
sale "ultrasonic antifoulings" consisting of transducers spaced
at 6 foot intervals on the hull that made it very uncomfortable
for beasties to want to cling to - or so the theory went. I haven't
seen them for some time so maybe it never caught on, but then the
main problem I've experienced is weed build-up, especially in the
still waters of the marina, not beasties, only a few of the later
ever having been discovered when hauling out.
A good run out in a gale with a 30 minute pounding does wonders
for shifting slime, even if you never get above 3 kts!!
Brian
|
801.11 | 60 Grit <=> Smooth Enough | ECADSR::FINNERTY | | Mon Apr 25 1988 13:30 | 17 |
| Thanks, everyone.
Somehow all this talk of boundary layers & turbulent vs laminar
flows gave me more stamina this year, and I wound up making it
smoother than I would have otherwise.
Micron CSC currently costs 109 $/gallon at BLISS, but only
89 $/Gallon at Jamestown Distributors... worth the trip if you're
near Narragansett Bay.
By the way, I used 60 grit paper on an orbital sander which had
been relegated to the basement as "useless", and got much better
results than I have in the past with not much more effort.
- Jim
|
801.12 | Keep it LAMINAR at long as possible | LKPDEE::WALLIN | Hasse (Hans), DCC/Finance, DEE @LNK | Tue Apr 26 1988 03:17 | 22 |
|
Re: .6
I would like to point out that the main effort when it comes to
achieving low frictional resistance should be in GETTING A SMOOTH
SURFACE IN THE FIRST ONE OR TWO FEETS BEHIND THE BOW AND BEHIND
THE LEADING EDGE OF THE KEEL.
This is due to the fact that this is where You have laminal flow
in the boundary layer, and the laminar flow is very sensitive
when it comes to smoothness as it will not stay laminar if the
surface it is flowing over is not smooth enough, perhaps
roughness of more than 1/10th of the boundary layer.
The beauty of laminar flow is that it is not building in thickness
as fast as turbular flow, at normal sailboat speed.
I.e. less energy, higher speed.
/Hasse Wallin (M.S. Naval Architecture RIT, Stockholm, not so long ago)
|
801.13 | Trailing edges and laminar flow | DELNI::FACHON | | Tue Apr 26 1988 14:15 | 16 |
| Hmmm...
Ross, you mention that squared off trailing edges to rudders
and keels ADDs drag. I know a lot of racers -- me -- that deliberately
square that surface -- about 3/16ths wide -- because it's
supposed to reduce drag. Any comment on this widely practiced
trailing edge treatment.
As for "keeping it laminar as long as possible,"
we strive to get everything forward of the keel, the keel itself,
and the rudder sanded to a glass-like finish. From the keel
on aft, we are progressively less fussy -- thinking that
turbulent flow is kicking in anyway. Any comments or suggestions?
What do you think about squaring off the trailing edges of control
surfaces?
|
801.14 | | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Tue Apr 26 1988 19:16 | 9 |
| The stuff I have heard and read indicated squared of trailing
edges are significant in reducing turbulence or something.
I remember from a SAIL magazine a couple seasons back that
even the sharp corner from the hull to transom was important
to speed, and the better boats had the sharper corner.
Walt
|
801.15 | more yet | CLT::FANEUF | | Wed Apr 27 1988 12:55 | 29 |
| There may well be dome beneficial effect from a small squared edge;
the energy lost to tip and trailing edge vortices is pretty
significant, and depends on lots of tricky little details. In fact,
only testing of your particular hull/foil form will tell you for
sure. The squared-off edges I had in mind are those you encounter
in some tradtional boats (1=2"), or keel trailing edges which end
in large radius. For cruisers, fussing over sharp vs. 3/16" squared
edges will probably be lost in the noise. There's also an issue
of how hard it is to form and prevent damage to a very fine edge;
most of what you see out there will be a compromise based at least
as much on manufacturing convenience as anything else.
Sharp transitions at the end of the boat may offer some benefit
by creating completely detached flow at a well defined place, instead
of a large area with partially detached flow and possibly large
amounts of variable drag. This can reduce the volume in which vortices
and turbulence are generated, thus reducing the energy lost at the
end of the vessel. I don't know the numbers. Note that the effect
of rating rules is at least as important in the sharp tailed form
of boats as any other factor. This is an area in which cruisers
are most likely to differ radically from racers, as structural
convenience, needs for stowage space, and most importantly the amount
of buoyancy available to react to large following seas are more
crucial to cruisers than low ratings and the ultimate in reduced
drag.
Ross Faneuf
|
801.16 | Salks also.. | RDF::RDF | Rick Fricchione | Fri Apr 29 1988 09:53 | 6 |
| I bought MICRON CSC at Salks Hardware in Warwick for $89/gallon
also. A little closer for some people.
Rick
|
801.17 | The racer's edge... | DELNI::FACHON | | Wed May 18 1988 15:43 | 23 |
| Just finished the spring wet sanding ritual. How smooth
was smooth enough? Well, after 8 people wet sanded with 220 for 6
hours, we discovered that some tiny pits just wouldn't
sand out. Still a mystery as to where the pits came from.
All I can say is that due to blistering, the hull was epoxy coated
and sanded smooth three seasons ago. The pits appeared over time
-- reverse blistering? At any rate, we stripped the forward third of
the hull back down to the epoxy, and then hand sanded it fair. We
did not penetrate through the epoxy. Three coats of paint and
4-people-sanding-with-220-for-5-hours later, we had a passable
finish. Being a fanatic, however, and feeling like we hadn't
truely done justice to the effort of stripping the the paint
in the first place, I worked an additional 6 hours to remove
every trace of orange peel from the forward sections.
I then went over the leading 8 feet -- everything ahead of the keel,
speedos, and depth transducer -- as well as the keel and rudder with 400.
We're talking a mirror finish -- especially the forward sections.
Was it worthwhile? Who knows. But if the Monhegan proves to be another
early morning drifter, we may have a secret weapon!
;)
|
801.18 | Not the Monhegan! Aaaaahh! | AKOV12::DJOHNSTON | | Wed May 18 1988 18:18 | 16 |
| I think you inhaled too much Micron in the sanding! Not even a
smooth bottom can make the Monhegan a rational race. Last year's
was finally the one so bad we swear to never do it again. Two years
ago we had an amorous whale follow us all night. The speculation
was that our sonic speedo was driving this poor beast wild.
Do me a favor. If you see a boat named Fat Tuesday doing that race
this year, shoot me with a flare gun. I'll deserve it.
The charity race for MS (or some such disease) the following weekend
is a good time, however.
Dave
Sorry about getting off the subject.
|
801.19 | | DELNI::FACHON | | Fri May 20 1988 14:25 | 4 |
| Oh yeah, "Fat Tuesday," I think you passed us last year.
We were experimenting with a forward rudder configuation
at the time. ;)
|
801.20 | | GRAMPS::BAILEY | Summertime gonna come & go my oh my | Mon May 23 1988 09:01 | 16 |
| RE .18 & .19
Well, both you guys passed us plenty of times last season.
Somehow I doubt that the worlds smoothest bottom can make up for
just one blown tack or sloppy spinnaker set. Thanx for the tips
though. It gave us the incentive to put in a lot of extra work
on the bottom this year. Add that to re-cut sails and another year's
experience for the crew and perhaps we'll be doing some passing
of our own this season. See y'all on the starting line ...
... Bob
P.S. - Anybody else doing the JFK next week-end ??
|
801.21 | Practice, practice, practice | AKOV12::DJOHNSTON | | Mon May 23 1988 10:37 | 14 |
| R. .20, you're absolutely right. Sloppy crew work can very quickly
destroy any advantage you build by having a smooth bottom. That's
why we are not doing the JFK regatta next weekend. We are so late
this season (stinky weather) and are having mandatory practice
sessions. We'll be doing the Mass bay races starting the weekend
after Mem. Day as well as Edgartown race week and Monhegan (no,
we can't really be again, can we?). Staying pretty local this year.
Just brought Fat Tuesday down to M'head from Gloucester yesterday
and it felt great to be on the water again!
Dave
|
801.22 | Local event note? | DELNI::FACHON | | Mon May 23 1988 14:02 | 17 |
| Staying away from JFK -- we're rusty too. We also have some problems
with shaft allignment, so the iron main is useless. Makes
delivery a bit of a pain. As for smooth bottoms, a prolonged
stretch of ghosting will make a well-prepped bottom pay off
handsomely. Try going .2 of a knot faster than your competition
for an hour or two. It may be only one race all season in which
you get a real pay off, but sometimes that one race could make
the difference in your overall standings. There's also the
psychological advantage of knowing your boat is slick. On the other
hand, you have one less excuse when you loose. ;)
Think it would be worthwhile to set up a current racing events
note -- sort of war stories and what's going on this season? Is
there such a note already?
Dean ("Bodacious")
|
801.23 | It's a long way to Marina Bay ... | GRAMPS::BAILEY | Summertime gonna come & go my oh my | Mon May 23 1988 17:49 | 24 |
| Uh, Dean ...
What do you mean by "ghosting"? Isn't going .2 of a knot faster
than your competition what yacht racing's all about?
Perhaps you could elaborate. And then again perhaps not. We are
in your fleet after all. And even though you've had an easy time
dusting us off the last couple of years I hope to see that change
(at least some of the time) this season.
I can see we have a different attitude about racing than you guys
though. We're rusty, but figure we'll sharpen up quicker doing
an early season regatta than just going out practicing. And we
have the mid-week races to sharpen up against some less serious
competition in. And it's a long ride to Boston. We figure on doing
a few corkscrews in the ocean practicing spinnaker sets and take-downs
on the way to Marina Bay. That and a coupla hundred tacks ought
to work some of the rust out.
Good luck getting that shaft aligned. See ya on the course June 5(?)
... Bob (from WAGS)
|
801.24 | ghosting... | DELNI::FACHON | | Tue May 24 1988 15:59 | 14 |
| Yeah, I guess you could say that about racing. But I was referring to
going .3 of a knot while everyone else is doing .1
or dead in the water -- the type of conditions when it
takes incredible stealth just to get the boat moving at all, and
then someone uses the head and the wash spins the boat around,
or you start making cracks about jet propulsion. But enough of
this scatalogical banter. The point is, a really slick
"bottom" (oops) pays off in the zephyrs.
Of course, there's always the CRAP-shoot factor to contend with -- you
know, when you've "ghosted" ahead and the wind fills in from BEHIND.
;)
|