The rules allow flaps on the main foils which most feel are used to get the boat up on the foils. The rudder foil has to be fixed with no flaps or aircraft style elevator. The rake of the rudder is controllable which adjust the angle of attack of the rudder foil and the stern moving up and down adjust the angle of attack of the main foils. I haven't read anything (probably big secret) on how automated this is. The boat in the video main foil goes up and out of the water due to too angle of attack being to high then stalls due to no water flow. Then the foil goes back into the water at a negative angle of attack that was creating massive drag slowing the boat down and broaching. May have been a test that went wrong.Of course, not being there, we can't actually know, but it looks like she became slightly bow down which caused a downward tilt in the foil angle. The foil slowly dove and lost headway with the increase in drag, pulling the boat over. Does the foil have trim tabs?
-Will (Dragonfly)
Maxdraft is typo (says 500 mm)To save the teams millions in design and engineering, the AC75 tech committee has designed and will supply the wing arms and the cant actuators as One Design parts. The teams get to play in the gray box shown. The T foils. That is where the race will be won or lost.
Actually, this isn’t much different than the traditional monohull, where you try and find a balance between the sailplans center of effort and hull/foils center of lateral resistance. The only difference here is that the hull provides zero component to the CLR.Interesting about the post where the rudder cant have trim tabs.
All boats with active pressured sail want to pinwheel around a fixed point. The bows want to spin and nose dive into the water. With no more boyancy to counteract this force there needs to be a way to level the hull. Amazing if all they have is the central foil, and no "elevator" trim.
That understates the amount of secret sauce involved in making that happen.Actually, this isn’t much different than the traditional monohull, where you try and find a balance between the sailplans center of effort and hull/foils center of lateral resistance. The only difference here is that the hull provides zero component to the CLR.
oh no, for sure it’s impressive. But the modeling allows that capability to be set as a fixed criteria. Then it always solves for that when creating design options. All of the boats will solid flyers right out of the box.That understates the amount of secret sauce involved in making that happen.
Its like comparing the stability of a pencil on a desk versus resting level on top of another pencil. Impressive designs.