Deep keel vs centerboard, given same boat make\model.
Which is faster\better in light air? IE: cb easier to heel to get initial flow? Has less drag with board up?
Is stability difference that great? cb easier to capsize?
Is any sailing to windward performance difference significantly noticeable or just on paper?
Why would a person go with a cb option, other than the foot or so less of grounding risk?
Anyone who has sailed a centerboard, ballasted boat (I never have), any additional comments.
Thank you
Is stability difference that great? *** slightly less in a CB if 'form stabiliity' is lacking. (modern large beam boats depend more on 'form stability' than on keel weight.
cb easier to capsize? yes due to the higher 'center of mass' of the boat (for comparing same boat)
The generalized
FOIL shape of a deep fin keel is better due to the hydrodynamics/aerodynamics: Less drag'; and if properly designed, the foil can provide LIFT (to windward) - yes indeed,
a properly designed keel shape will provide LIFT to windward; thus better enabling 'pointing ability' as such a keel '
flying' to windward. The shape, length to 'depth', thickness, etc. all combine to affect the 'efficiency' of the foil. Modern keels mostly follow the shape as defined by NACA (predecessor of NASA) of the "NACA 63A010" for sailing (or flying)... there are other NACA shapes that have less drag, more lift, etc. but the '010' shape is the overall best shape .... for the conditions in which such a keel-foil shape that most sailboats are operating. The 63A010 shape is the accepted 'standard' shape for the most efficient keel for a boat, all other shapes (for keels on boats) are less efficient overall. do websearch: "NACA + 63A010"
Cautionary note: forget all the USA high school 'stuff' about air or water streams traveling faster over one side of a foil/wind/keel causing 'lift' -- as that 'bunk' concept has been wrong since the time of the Wright Brothers. Just totally ignore this widespread erroneous concept when analyzing foils
Centerboards (heavy weight nor not) are generally flat or 'flat-ish' plates (and usualy not even remotely close to the "010" shape profile, ...... PLUS, the 'trunk' of the centerboard, not being 'faired' to the hull creates significant turbulence hence drag. Further if the centerboard trunk is allowed to come in contact with the atmosphere / air will allow the centerboard to 'suck air down' into the trunk and will result in cavitation of the foil (added to the turbulence of the 'trunk opening').
For full or cutaway full keels the length of the keel to come close to the width dimensions of the 010 would necessitate an extremely wide keel ... that this 'profile shape' about 3 ft. wide in a 010 full keel on a ~40 ft. boat would produce immense ''profile drag", add to that the immense amount of 'skin friction' due to the large LENGTH shape .... and the optimzation quickly falls off. Secondly the long 'bottom edge' creates a lot of 'tip vortice' (small 'tornados') as the high pressure side 'short circuits' across the edge to the low pressure side.
The best general shape for a sail boat operating between 0 to about 15 kts. is the NACA 63A010 ALL other shapes are less efficient.
Summary:
• deep keel comes closest to the 63A010 shape
• centerboards --- generally too flat, and have high turbulence due the shape of the 'throat' of the centerboard trunk .... plus they can easily 'cavitate' if air can get 'sucked into the trunk'
• Full keels .... wrong aspect ratio (depth to length), too flat, too narrow of width re: "010 shape, subject to substantial 'tip vortices' and 'shunting of high' to low pressure across the 'bottom'. However can better optimize at speeds MUCH MUCH MUCH greater than is possible due to 'hull speed' - a functional impossibility ---- not optimized for the normal operational speeds of sailboats.
• FWIW --- the shape of the leading edge of the keel/foil/wing is the most important.
"Anyone who has sailed a centerboard, ballasted boat (I never have), any additional comments". If you mean a CB (dagger-board, actually) with a 'weight bulb' at the bottom which is 'cranked up/down' - generally the foil section above the bulb is too narrow to generate optimum lift and generally the trunks are open to the atmosphere & can suck air at times, and thus are less efficient than a boat with out an 'air communicating' trunk, etc - ie.: fixed keels.
The best general purpose keel shape is the NACA 63A010, and the deeper (Length—Depth aspect ratio) the better the efficiency. Nature has already profoundly designed/evolved these shapes ..... appendages of whales, fins on sharks, wings of an abatross or other 'soaring' birds, etc. You dont find many full keeled or centerboard birds/fish, etc. in nature do you?
