Sun, 23 Oct 11 19:56

 Well no joy sailing wise over the past few days I'm afraid. Yesterday it blew when it wasn't supposed to and today it didn't when it was. Other than that we have had some pretty light conditions.

We took the opportunity to re-skin the wing where it needed it. We are also putting on a superior heat shrink film from HIFI films. It's both thinner (therefore lighter) and stronger than the previous stuff. We did a couple of small repairs inside the wing and also worked on making all the seals between the section much more efficient. I think this should give us a nice kick along.

Nick touched up the tip of the foil after the damage we did when we used it as a plough at the end of the last run. Helena has been working hard on editing up all the videos. She came across this piece on the camera we use to look at the TACKTICK wind instruments on the shore. We thought it was pretty funny so made a short video out of it...

http://youtu.be/9qoGDTM6d4w

Helena has also made a beauty which Adam took on the last run. Hopefully we can post it soon.

We have started fitting some of the fairings on the boat and am looking forward to our next runs, especially now that we can take passengers. I can also start getting Helena in the drivers seat.

We will stay on full-standby every day this week. Tuesdays forecast looks like the big one. Let's hope it delivers.

Cheers, Paul.

Thu, 20 Oct 11 20:36

Well yesterday turned into a pretty wild day. The way the morning was unfolding we knew the wind was going to outperform the forecast. 

VESTAS Sailrocket 2 had up to now done four runs within a knot of 50 knots. Two over and two under. We weren’t sure if we had hit some sort of flow phenomena relating to the radical new foil around this speed. The team here in Namibia had been hurriedly collating all the data from onboard the boat and the shore to send it to the ‘brains trust’ back in the UK. As no two runs are the same we wanted to get a solid understanding of where we should be performance wise and what our areas of weakness are. As it stands, we feel we should be hitting peak speeds around 60 knots. The ‘brains trust’ aren’t that emotional... they just want good data and the understanding it generates. 

As is often the case, the weather comes before the understanding and you just have to ‘wing’ it and get out there. We decided we wouldn’t change anything major and that we should simply try and get more information that would better define developing trends. It would be my job to simply do more clean runs down the course to generate more points on the graph. 

When we got over to ‘speed-spot’ we noted that the wind was still very West. This means we get a small swell rolling down the course along with the wind chop. It also gives us a TWA of around 120 degrees which is a bit too downwind for us. When the wind started gusting over 26 knots I decided to do a shakedown run anyway. As The support RIB lowered me out onto the course I noted that I was actually pointing backwards up the course due to the offset fuselage angle of the boat. Nonetheless, VESTAS Sailrocket 2 took off and I bore away down the course. She went well but lacked the big accelerating lunges that we were looking for. At the end of the course I only had to bear away a little for the speed to drop off rapidly. Obviously the TWA was too deep and the wing had been on the edge of stall. The team asked how fast it had been but I didn’t even think it was worth mentioning. It turns out we had once again hit 50 knots! I’m getting used to it now. 

We towed VSR2 back up to the timing hut and decided to wait for the wind to settle further South. The day was building but it was very unsettled. We were getting wind ranges from 21 to 31 knots and swinging through 20 degrees. This wasn’t good for generating steady data. Nick had arrived back from the UK. He had landed in Walvis, caught a taxi to the Yacht Club, climbed into a MUSTO drysuit and was RIB’d across the lagoon to speed-spot still spinning. We waited for the wind to settle for an hour. It was improving marginally.

 

ROCKET RIDES

I decided that it would be a good opportunity to try out the back seat in VESTAS Sailrocket 2. Adam from WIRED magazine USA had been put in contact with us and wanted to come and see us try and break through the cavitation barrier. He has been living with us for the past month and watched our steady, solid progress. The actual 'Barrier' was proving very hard to define. Adam was leaving the next day so I figured it was the perfect time to try out the back seat. He seemed pretty keen. As we had never tried to sail the boat two up, I made no promises as to how it would go.

It was obviously windy at the top of the course. I really liked having someone else on board to share the sensation. I could feel the extra weight on the front float and knew this was the problem area.

With all the drag on the front float of VSR2, it resisted sliding sideways to help me bear away onto the course. I struggled to get the nose to bear away and every time I sheeted out to get the flow attached to the wing, VSR2 just turned more into the wind. I was now sailing back into the shore and running out of room. I way over sheeted the wing to windward to stall it and perhaps force the nose of the boat to bear away. With all the drag it stubbornly refused.

I got Adam to release a small control line in the back cockpit which allowed me to over sheet some more. I also told him that it doesn’t look like it’s going to work. He reluctantly acknowledged this and already said thanks for trying. Slowly the boat began to respond and bear away. I told him to hold his horses as we might be on to a winner. Sure enough we managed to bear away and slowly slide sideways away from the beach. When I was happy that we were in a good position I eased the wing out to about 20 degrees and began the start up trajectory that allows me to straighten out the small front mounted rudder. This gets rid of a lot of drag and the acceleration begins. There was a lot more spray as the nose began to lift but already I knew we were going to get a run in. This was great. Someone else was going to join me for a wild ride down what was left of the magical mile that is ‘speed-spot’. My big concern was that we had already used up 800 meters trying to get started. This meant we only had about 800 meters left before we were into the shallows at the end of the course. There wasn’t enough depth for me to sail through these shallows with the foil down.

VESTAS Sailrocket 2 accelerated a little more slowly... but then she hooked in. I was heading straight at the Timing hut and bore away onto the course. It was fast.

I was stoked that Adam was going to get a good ride. The leeward pod was already flying quite high as we shot past the hut at around 48-50 knots.

Then we bisected another couple of punchy gusts and VSR2 shot forward. I forgot about the passenger and focused on the situation rapidly unfolding before me. I don't think Adam had expected me to go flat out with him onboard. He was probably expecting a somewhat watered down ride. So whilst I'm going faster than I've ever been before, he's in the back doing this...

The boat was smoking and I wanted to ride the gust to get the 500 meter average. Things were coming up quick. I eased the wing and bore away but VSR2 hardly slowed down. I was now out of runway and had to take evasive action so as not to hit the shallows at speed. At around 45 knots I swung into a hard right hand turn into the beach and wind. It was a long hard turn that the boat actually accelerated into as she smoked through her own ‘power window’.  I knew I was in shallow water and started to try and release the main foil pin before we settled down to allow it to kick up but we slowed too quick. I felt the foil start to plough the thick mud and shell bottom. Not nice when the leading edge is a thin sharp edge as it is on this foil. We slowed quickly and stuck. I knew the situation wasn’t yet under control and could even escalate from here. VSR2 was floating and only the main foil tip was stuck. The grounding hadn’t been very hard so I doubted any serious damage. The RIB took ages to get to us as I tried to free the foil. I looked back at Adam and he was just wide eyed and looking at me for my response as to what had just happened. He had seen the GPS just in front of him. I was still concerned about the boat. As I tried to get things sorted I could sense Adam trying to draw my attention to the GPS. He wanted to know what the 53 number meant. I kept focusing on the boat but he persisted wanting to know what had just happened... how fast was that. “What had I just witnessed”?  Eventually I jumped in the back cockpit and checked it out. 53.92 knots and a 50.05 500 meter average (54.4 on the processing and 50 even for the 500). It quickly dawned on me what had just happened. I told Adam that I had spent a great part of my life trying to sail on the fastest boats in the world... and in one ride he had been as fast as I had ever been. He was stoked. He had seen speed sailing at it’s best. He really hadn’t expected me to go that hard with him in the back. Neither had I really... but when your gust comes along... what are you going to do?

That was our first ever 50 knot average run... and it was all pretty easy. I had a 75kg passenger sitting up in the back waving and none of the extra aero aids onboard. The wing wasn’t fully sheeted in as the pod was already flying high and that would just make it go higher. I could easily see where another 5-8 knots would come from. VSR2 had beaten VSR1’s best ever run and she is still getting warmed up. I know now that we have a real contender. The kitesurfers are no longer the undisputed kings. They are the hunted. I know we haven’t done it yet but with every run our confidence grows. We were all buzzing as the thrill of a big run and what it represented began to sink in. The foil damage was only cosmetic. It’s one tough boat. Adam came to the breakfast table still smiling and was still buzzing as he got on the plane later today. He couldn’t have hoped for a better experience... short of going 60 of course.

So, what does this mean for where we are at now performance wise?

The wind was between 24 and 29 knots on that run as you will clearly see on a video Helena is putting together now. The extra speed probably came due to a strong gust around 29 knots. I think we are still underperforming but not by a huge margin. We can only improve on this with refinement. Like I said, there were some easy gains to be had there.

We built VSR 2 to be a tough and rugged boat up to the job of sailing in 30 knots of wind. She is doing this admirably. Refinement takes time and sometimes you don’t have it... but you do have lots of wind. If we can bludgeon a world record out of a top-end windy day just using brute force then so be it. The final speed is what counts. We are already demonstrating that we can sail hard on top end days. It’s the apparent wind speed that will ultimately count, not the true wind speed. So, from this point I believe we can beat the current world record. I know we will continue to progress and that 60 knots isn’t that far away. We believe that the new foil will keep delivering the goods at speeds where conventional foils will get marginal. We do still have the conventional foil and are looking forward to seeing just how far it can be pushed. We will do that soon.

The rate of progress has been staggering. We barely have time to collate and assess the data before we have moved on a substantial amount and generated a whole new pile of data. We believe that our performance is directly attributed to the unknown performance of the foil. We will continue to work on ways to make it perform better and it is entirely possible that we can make it perform a lot better. Simply put, in our crudest form sailing at our design maximum wind speed, we are already in the ball park. It’s an exciting prospect. I personally want to see at least a 65 at some stage of the game.

RATIFIED WORLD RECORD ATTEMPT COMING

So we have begun discussion with the WSSRC and it looks like we will start our attempt on the 17th of next month... maybe sooner (The price has gone up by £500... probably for some ISAF party absolutely essential to speed sailing).  This will be immediately after the kite surfers record attempt down in Luderitz. It seems like an odd event. Why aren’t Rob Douglas and the other guns invited?  Oh well, hopefully we can bring the Outright record a few hundred kilometres further North. Either way it’s going to be a big couple of months for speed sailing in Namibia and one way or the other the record will stay here.

The next weather window looks to be around next Tuesday. The wing skins had split in places indicating that they were perishing from the UV. If you can give the skins a hard flick and they split/shatter… it’s time to change them. We have taken the wing off again and will give it a serious makeover. We will also work on all the seals between the sections to reduce any pressure leakage. Some of the aero fittings will start going on and more weight will be taken off as redundant systems are removed. Piece by piece we will build a record.

Cheers, Paul

Wed, 19 Oct 11 19:02

 Hi all, just a quick one to say that we have punched through 54 knots, 62 mph and 100 kmh. The fun part is that we did it two up and VESTAS Sailrocket 2 was far from optimally trimmed. It was a wild ride. The day was quite unsettled but I decided to make the most of it and take Adam from WIRED USA for a shot in the back seat. We have never sailed two up before. VSR2 struggled to get started but once she found her feet... WHOOSKA!  It was a crazy ride that took me...well... I'll do the full update tomorrow. I just saw the photos and they are wild. Adam had the ride of his life. In 1 ride he's been as fast as I've ever been.

This boat will do the business. It WILL beat the current world record. I know that now. The question is how much we can get out of it. 

Triple rum and cokes in a pint glass are the drinks for a new best speed.

So where are we with the new foil? I don't know... all I know is that it's fast. There is so much to tell about that last full-on run.

Update to follow... everyone is sitting here madly downloading data, HD video footage and photo's... and slurping on rum. We are still sailors remember.

Cheers, Paul.

Wed, 19 Oct 11 11:54

 Today is shaping up nicely as we climb into our MUSTO drysuits and prepare to launch VESTAS Sailrocket 2 one more time. The skies and seas are crystal clear and the wind is already gusting over 20 knots as it swings into the SW where it will lock in to it's normal 105 degree TWA to the course.

Nick is flying back in from the UK but will arrive a bit late, Dave is flying out and just said his goodbyes... and Wally has been sub'd in to help out. Wally takes his work very seriously. He told us he got a sweater for his birthday... but he prefers screamers! Hurry up Nick;)

The idea for today is to do a repeat of the previous days sailing and simply collect more data points. I will also try to sail some slightly different courses to the wind to see how the foil responds under different loads... and to see how accurately the onboard wind data can record these subtle differences.

If all goes well I hope to be able to take a passenger for a ride for the first time.

Hopefully we will get some top end conditions around 25-30 to see how the boat goes then. We may be very close to a 'tipping point' for this foil where a whole new speed range will open up. It's hard to know for sure where we are at right now which is why the 'brains trust' want more solid evidence.

We have also been advised to bring the high speed sheeting angle in by 3 degrees to 7. 

So back to the lab. Gotta go now.

Let's see what happens.

Cheers, Paul.

Mon, 17 Oct 11 15:23

 So now we are collating all the data to try and get a good picture of where we are at. We have built up a pretty solid VPP (Velocity Prediction Program) throughout the project and now we want to see exactly where we are in the real world relative to that.

The performance of the new foil has been pretty rapid. There are lots of variables in this game and we need to be careful before jumping to any assumptions. Whilst we are all delighted to be dealing with issues around 50 knots, we really thought that most of these flow issues would have been resolved by this speed. We believed we would be way out on the open highway by now with the foil travelling in a nice big 'super' cavity. I don't think we are that far away from it... but we may just need a few little additions to help it on its way.

It would be very nice to know exactly what is happening with the ventilated cavity that we want to cover the whole upper/suction/windward surface of the main foil. The question is how do we do it. As it is inclined at 30 degrees downwards in the water, it makes it pretty damned hard to film as the best angle is side on. We are considering such things as cameras on the flat back edge of the foil... but that only shows the bubble down the base of the foil i.e. the back, blunt edge of the 'axe-head' profile. Looking around the corner and getting any clear imagery would be a lot harder. Another thought is to have small spring loaded 'feelers' that stick upright when they are not forced back by water. The fact is that any of these systems always ends up more complicated and time consuming than you can imagine. They are projects in their own right. We will try them as a last resort. Firstly we will probably try to view the cavity externally either from another craft or merely from different camera angles on the boat. We will conduct further trials trying different sailing techniques and we will try a few simply 'stick-on' mods to the upper foil surface to see what they do.

 

On another note, we have begun making enquiries relating to making a ratified record attempt in a month or so. Let's see what the WSSRC make of that. I was hoping to be going faster before committing but we are simply running out of time. We may have to make a leap of faith on this one in the hope that we can continue progressing in the next few weeks before the actual attempt will start.

 

We will use these next couple of days before Wednesday's solid forecast to give VSR2 a good going over. We have already found a few little chafe issues. Now that we are pushing the boat we have to be extra vigilant on maintaining her. I have begun removing some of the systems that we no longer feel we will need. We had a very complicated rigging system installed that would allow us to swing the whole rig and beam fore and aft in column. We thought we would need it for the start-up phase as the boat accelerated. This hasn't been the case. It is a real joy to remove all this stuff and greatly simplify the boat.

 

So let's see what the brains trust back in the UK come up with. Thanks again for all your constructive input. It really is all good stuff and therefore much appreciated.

 

Cheers, Paul

Sat, 15 Oct 11 22:28

Hmmmmm...

Well it looks like ventilated foils aren’t going to give up all their secrets that easily. We went out today in what I would call ‘top-end’ conditions with gusts up to 31 knots. The first run wasn’t in winds this strong. It was pretty much a repeat of yesterdays 50 knot run. The boat felt great and I managed to use the whole of the course. We are still downloading data but we know it was another run between 47-48 knots with peaks over 50.

SMOKING. GREAT CONDITIONS, WING IN, SITTING LOW... BUT...

Hmmmmm.

What’s going on here? I was sheeted in further and it was ‘solid’ wind. We really should be seeing continual solid progression, especially in these winds. I went again as the wind was hitting the 30’s. When the wind is gusting 30 it represents average winds more around 26-27. Helena sounded nervous as she called out the gusts. VESTAS Sailrocket 2 is made to sail in winds to 30 knots. I am only worried if it represents an ‘over speeding’ situation with crazy build ups of apparent wind. The apparent is what the boat feels and hence what will pull it apart. We aren’t there yet so I made the call to go for it and see what happens. I can always just ease the wing. I reckon on being pretty damned aware that I’m doing over 60! I discussed it with Alex as he is good at repeating my earlier plans and reasoning to me. The main reason for taking a bold step was to know for sure that we were over optimum design wind speeds of 26 knots average. If we still had a ‘glass-ceiling’ around 50 knots then we would know beyond all doubt that there was something we were missing. Raising the wing and launching the boat all went pretty well which is always encouraging. The comm.’s went down for the 87th time. VESTAS Sailrocket 2 accelerated like a scalded cat. I hit the course at pace and the acceleration came in brilliant bursts. I’m really starting to get comfortable with this boat... then BAM... she kicked and slowed. I figured either the wing or part of it had blown out. I pulled in arm fulls of mainsheet and there was nothing there. Obviously something in the new purchase system had failed for some reason. The middle section of the wing spun out to 90 degrees using its full-feathering range.

I put the rudder hard to windward to turn the rapidly slowing boat under the wing. Next I kicked up the main foil to allow the tail of the boat to skid around under the wing. The RIB was quickly up to me. As soon as they had me hooked up by the bow I went below decks to chase the culprit. It was nothing major. Simply a small string had failed as VESTAS Sailrocket 2 accelerated hard in the strongest conditions she had sailed in. I had replaced a single spliced string with a doubled up string of the same diameter but with two bowlines in it. It failed at the bowline. Typical, I should know better although I didn’t think it was that critical. Annoyingly it had happened at the peak wind of the day just as we were hitting 48.77 knots coming onto the course. I’m pretty sure we would have seen some higher big 'fun' numbers... but have no idea how high. It was set to be our biggest run. Once fixed we went straight back up to the top of the course and did another run. The wind was down to 22-25 knots. It was a real nice, clean run. I sheeted the wing in fully and the leeward pod leapt into the air. Not only does closing the wing-gaps in the wing increase the efficiency of the main wing, but it also increases the efficiency of the ‘wing-extension’ that sticks out the side. This purely gives vertical lift.

NOW THIS IS A GREAT LOOK. IT'S MY NEW SCREENSAVER. THIS IS VSR2 FULLY IN THE GROOVE. BEAUTIFUL. I'M STARTING TO FALL FOR THIS BOAT!

WE ARE FLYING BOTH THE LEEWARD AND AFT FLOATS. THERE IS SPRAY... BUT IT'S HARDLY HITTING THE BOAT AS THE FUSELAGE IS ALIGNED WITH THE APPARENT WIND.

OK... THAT'S FLYING THE LEEWARD POD A BIT TOO HIGH NOW!

The leeward pod flew high for the whole run. This is a sign that we can stand the wing more vertical. The leeward pod should only be flying at 50 knots with full flap deflection. There was no flap deflection here.

Overall it was our best run. I noted on the tell-tale on the bow that the apparent wind was around 10 degrees off being aligned with the fuselage. We did an average over 500 meters of better than our old ‘B’ class record but less than our best VSR1 run (which the WSSRC were too old to ratify) i.e. around 47.5 knots. We hit another peak just shy of 50. Something is definitely going on here.

As the wind had dropped we called it a day. We need to digest this position and focus on problem areas. I can only guess that it has to be something funky relating to the ventilated foil. If we are truly ventilated then the speed should just keep climbing. So I figure that we are not fully ventilated. So what are we? That’s the question. I already had some theories from a few days ago that I figured the 50 knot run dispelled yesterday. They are back in the forefront of my mind now.

Overall the day was very successful. VESTAS Sailrocket 2 really behaved herself in some pretty full on conditions and saved her own bacon when the mainsheet blew out. VSR1 would have rained down in that situation. VSR2 is proving to be very good at doing what she is designed to do and that is to be a tough, reliable and stable testing platform for dragging these experimental foils down the course in the real world.

I’m annoyed about the events of the second run. I think I may just have to commit to the WSSRC and book a record attempt (time to play that game). This means hoping that we can find a real breakthrough between now and then. We have to do it really otherwise we have to come down all over again. New team, new visas, more flights, extended carnet etc. So the pressures on to get it done now. We still aren’t at record breaking speeds... but every day we are closer. I’m more confident in all aspects of the boat. The new mainsheet is better, weaknesses were found and VSR2 has one again proved that she’s tough and wants to live. Yeah, I’m happy with that.

 

Cheers, Paul

p.s. sorry for the late blog at the end of the day. Sometimes the internet here just goes haywire. it's not for lack of trying on our part. TIA as they say!

Sat, 15 Oct 11 11:16

 Today is shaping up nicely... perhaps a bit too nicely. The morning greeted us with perfect blue skies and the wind kicked in before 11. This has the trademarks of a 'honking', old school Walvis blow.

We got in early to start cleaning up the 'bird'. We double checked the data which I'm happy to say was all good. It's great to have the COSWORTH gear back on line. Data logging is always difficult and time consuming to get right... but it's worth it as it can give you 'black and white' answers. It appears that VSR2 is well balanced at speed and nothing is overloading rudder-wise.

This morning I doubled the purchase on the mainsheet from 2:1 to 4:1. I should be able to get that wing right in today. Add that to the confidence of knowing that VSR2 is well balanced and we have more clear, high speed road ahead of us.

We will use Twitter today to post updates from out on the course. This will automatically go up on the front page of the website. We don't want to bombard all our Twitter followers so we will keep it to the important bits. Tomorrow we will endeavour to set up a different Twitter account for those who want all the nuts and bolts of a live-feed and don't mind the bombardment.

Cheers, Paul

p.s. thanks for the support and encouragement in the comments. These are exciting times for the project.

Fri, 14 Oct 11 21:07

VESTAS Sailrocket 2 in the house with a
50 knot+ run

We just got back in from a great session and I’m happy to say that VESTAS Sailrocket 2 is now in the 50 knot club. We did three runs culminating a great final sprint where she just surged over the 50 knot mark recoding a peak of 50.53 knots. On the previous run she hit over 46 knots.

Overall it has been a pretty stunning progression for the new ventilated foil. In successive runs she has gone from 27 knots to 36.7, 42.7, 46.3 and now 50.5 knots. The great thing is that she isn’t even getting close to any limit. Hydrodynamically 50 knots is the same as 60 is the same as 70. The only limit is structural. On the test bench we have taken her to a load equalling 65 knots with a 1 G turn and a respectable safety margin. It won’t be the foil that fails.

VESTAS Sailrocket 2 behaved impeccably on the course. I knew it was in the 50 knot region although she felt a lot different from VSR1. No spray for starters. I wear a full face helmet but no visor or sun glasses. It’s a nice dry ride up there. The acceleration comes hard but also drops off pretty quick. It feels like I am pulling along a good chunk of drag. One of the coolest things about these ventilated foils is the noise... sort of a hollow, haunted ‘yowl’ that you would make by sucking in through an ‘o’ shaped mouth. You hear the noise as a gas turbine starts up before the fuel ignites. Whatever... it’s a cool sound. I don’t have to do much steering. The mainsheet was too undergeared and I couldn’t sheet in over 45 knots now that I am reclined in the low profile seating. I’ll have to add another purchase. It will easily add another 5 knots. I was in close to the shore but I could still feel the chop. The leeward pod had started to ‘float’ in ground effect. Basically it’s all working. Now we have a heap of optimisation to carry out. Some of it will yield free speed.

Of course we are getting increasingly excited to be where we are at. Just ahead of todays performance lie many great ‘scalps’. Today’s 500 meter average put us up with the legendary game changer (And great inspiration to me), Yellow Pages Endeavour. From here I can see Vestas Sailrocket 1, then Maquarrie Innovation, then the mighty Hydroptere. At the rate this boat is progressing, I know the future looks bright. Each one of these days is to be savoured.

Right now i would love to add all the bolt-on speed bits to the boat and give the wing a deluxe skin makeover but that will have to wait as tomorrows forecast is equally good.

The 50 knot bottle of Pol Roger has been drunk and the rest of the team are down the pub. I wrote this blog once but the computer crashed when I tried to upload the pictures... so here it is again. I could complain... in fact I did (actually I’m quite impressed with myself that I still have a computer) but then again, this is a nice topic to be writing about.

So Happy days. From here on in VESTAS Sailrocket 2 will just get prettier and prettier. She’s really earning the respect.

Time to go. Hope I can still get some food.

Cheers, Paul.

Fri, 14 Oct 11 08:47

Today's forecast is looking robust... even up slightly from yesterday. The morning is a little overcast but right now at 12 past 9... the sun is already breaking through. Alex is in front of me tinkering with the COSWORTH loggers and a hair dryer is buzzing next door doing the final cure on the new strain guages installed on the rudder stock. Once it is well cured we will install the rudder and calibrate the strain guage against a calibrated load cell. We will put an incrementally increasing load on the rudder up to 200kg from both directions. From the last fast run we believe we only saw rudder loads around +30 kg i.e. '+' meaning loaded from the same direction as the main foil thus sharing the side load generated by the wing. This is perfect... but we have a lot more speed and side load to come.

The forecast predicts winds around 24-5 knots which is perfect. We need to do a good run over 50 now. The pressure is growing to commit to a WSSRC ratified record attempt as you need to give them a decent lead time to get their act together and send someone down here. This involves over £3K up front payment so you do want to be sure that you are ready. The good part is that it gives you some more time to prepare between booking and the actual attempt, the bad part is that it also gives your gremlins the opportunity to play and wipe you out just before the 28 day record window begins. I don't think we are ready to commit just yet. It's too much of a gamble having only done 42 + knots. We'll see what the next two days bring.

The new front planing surface is fitted so it will be interesting to see how that behaves. The cockpit has been cleaned up and the Terminator is alive as the COSWORTH instruments are once again flashing their bright red data providing eyes at me.

There is a new video on this website/Youtube of our fastest run yet using the ventilated main foil. You can see it here...youtu.be/GYAzMIwKsJE 

You can see how the wing is sheeted by the way that the lower wing section lines up with the fixed 'Wing Fillet' right at the bottom (see Wing-Sail explanation in boat section if unsure about parts). The wing is 'full-on' when these two parts come together. On this run, VESTAS Sailrocket 2 accelerated quite quickly initially so I left the wing out as I came into the flat water by the shore and beared away onto the course. I love the silvery lighting as VSR2 is coming towards the camera. I also like the fact that it's all happening on a regular windy day in an open harbour.

To say that I'm looking forward to today is a pretty big understatement. I feel good about this.

Cheers, Paul.

 

 

Wed, 12 Oct 11 13:23

 We have had a spell of light to moderate winds which are unsuitable for VESTAS Sailrocket 2.

Today we managed to get most of the data logging action working our way. It turns out that there were a three independent problems that all happened at the same time. That old chestnut!

So we definitely won't be sailing today and it looks like tomorrow is pretty flat as well. The front planing surface has now been bonded on so we could be taking two people sailing in the next outing... starting with Helena. This will be a hoot.

Friday and Saturday are good forecasts so let's just hope that they hold up.

For those of you 'technophiles' who crave some more detail info on the boat, I have written up a good description of the wing and how it works. You can find it in 'The Boat' section of the website under 'Wing-Sail' . I reckon there will be enough info in there to keep most of you happy. As usual, feel free to ask questions. I always read the comments and reply where appropriate. Next will be a description of how the ventilated/cavitating foil works... the only trouble is... we are still trying to understand that one ourselves. All we know is that it seems to be working. I'll also try and talk you through a 'drivers perspective' of how we get VSR2 from satndstill and up onto the boil for a complete run.

Cheers, Paul.

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