The commercial version was called Meridian. It didn't last long.
I raced on an Erickson 39 back when IOR was the rule. The owner had a
relationship with a yard in Gulfport Ms., adjacent to Seaworld and would
dock the boat there while "over on the coast" racing. Well, a couple of us
"kids" on the crew who couldn't afford hotel rooms (or hang at the bar all
night) would stay on the boat. Late at night we discovered a "hole" in the
fence by the porpoise pens. They, being raised in captivity, were used to
people and would come right up to the side to check us out (probably just as
bored as we were) and let us "pet" them. BTW: they like Vienna sausages.
Mark
Want to keep your WHOLE PAYCHECK?
PLEASE VISIT http://www.fairtax.org
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Shaddock" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, March 17, 2008 1:57 PM
Subject: RE: catalina27-talk: Sorta off topic, porpoises and keels


> That's amazing...  You know, I've never touched a porpoise but I keep
> imagining neoprene with a slick outer skin.  The 'oily' was actually
> Davidson's term for the porpoise skin--and since I've seen many, many
> pictures of them with nary a rainbow-tinged slick in evidence, I was
> surprised to see the word used.
>
> Wish I knew more about the Interlux paint.  Don't want worms growin' on my
> boat, though.
>
> Dave Shaddock
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sailor Chef
> Sent: Monday, March 17, 2008 3:09 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: catalina27-talk: Sorta off topic, porpoises and keels
>
> Greetings Dave. Funny you should mention porpoises. Interlux had (maybe
> still does) a "classified" bottom paint that was based on porpie skin.
They
> sold to the Navy.
> It was/is silicone based and has a somewhat soft, rubbery feel to it and
no
> anti-fouling properties. It was so slick that when the boat was at rest it
> would grow all hinds of stuff on it like it didn't have any paint at all.
> When the boat moved the growth just sloughed off.
> Interlux was trying to bring the product to the market and put some out
> there in selected places as a test.
> The yard I was associated with at the time was one.
> They painted the yard owners project boat, a salvaged Bravura 42.
> When the Interlux folks started to paint, they wouldn't let anyone near
and
> when they left, they took all the left scraps (masking tape, paper ect)
with
> them.
> The boat was in the water for about a year without moving except for
> occasional haul outs for work. Whenever it would come out, the bottom was
> the ugliest thing you have ever seen, algae, slim, barnacles, something
that
> looks like a pine tree seedling, worms and once, an oyster.
> You could take you hand and just wipe it all off. Most amazing thing I'd
> ever seen.
> They eventually brought a product to market but after they took all the
> "classified" stuff out, it didn't work.
> BTW: porpoises aren't oily/slimy like a fish. I had opportunity to play
with
> some back in the 70's, very slick and rubbery, like 1/4" neoprene over
very
> "hard" muscles with a Teflon coating.
> Mark
>
> Want to keep your WHOLE PAYCHECK?
> PLEASE VISIT http://www.fairtax.org
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "David Shaddock" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Sent: Monday, March 17, 2008 12:32 PM
> Subject: RE: catalina27-talk: Keel Fairing
>
>
> > Hi, other Dave S.--
> > Your hunch is correct; laminar flow in water disappears at a pretty low
> for
> > the waterline lengths and foil lengths we're discussing.  After I wrote
my
> > comments earlier, I went back through the thread and found the link to
> Bryon
> > Anderson's excellent article, which explained everything I was trying to
> > cover in a better fashion, with diagrams too.  He mentions 5 knots as
the
> > approximate speed at which we lose laminar flow.  That's oversimplifying
,
> > but it gives you an idea.  But laminar flow has a lot to do with the
NACA
> > profile--some profiles intentionally move the maximum depth aft in order
> to
> > maximize laminar flow; the idea is to keep the lift working for you as
> long
> > as possible.  My last plane was a Cessna 177RG, which had a laminar flow
> > wing designed to keep the flow 'attached' for 70% of its surface or
better
> > at speeds of about 170 mph.  It took a long time getting off the ground,
> but
> > was incredibly efficient in the air.  It was very different from my
> friend's
> > 175 (we traded for a while so he could get his commercial license),
which
> > had a fat high-lift wing that got you off the runway in a third of the
> > distance but only provided 2/3 the top speed for the same power and fuel
> > burn.
> >
> > Just because a flow goes turbulent, we're still interested in it and it
> can
> > still perform some useful work.  Besides, it's kind of a necessary evil;
> you
> > can't just provide the part of the foil that gives you laminar flow and
> then
> > remove the rest <grin>.  The whole profile works together.
> >
> > Now, you mentioned vortex generators...  They sell dimpled surface
> material
> > for airplanes to put on the surfaces where the flow starts to detach,
> under
> > the theory that the dimples (like the ones on golf balls, except
standing
> > proud of the surface) generate mini-vortices that help keep the flow
> (albeit
> > turbulent) attached.  Makes me wonder what this would do on the aft
faces
> of
> > a keel.  I notice my BMW has raised bumps all over the edges and strut
for
> > the side-view mirrors, to cut wind noise by keeping the flow attached so
> it
> > can't escape and whistle.
> >
> > But let's talk for a minute about porpoises.  Capable of 25 knots
> > underwater, and without a turbulent boundary layer...  I guess they
don't
> > understand Reynolds numbers.  Apparently they have a paper-thin outer
skin
> > with a thin spongy layer below that covering their real skin.  One
theory
> > says they can detect turbulence and adjust their body shape to reduce it
> by
> > controlling this soft layer.  Dr. Kenneth Davidson studied them heavily
> and
> > figured their speed was more due to their streamlined shape and the
> smooth,
> > oily skin, but later research does suggest that the softness is
apparently
> > as important as the skin.  But I wonder why my inflatable isn't
quicker...
> > Anyway, since I don't see a mechanism for the porpoises to control this
> fat
> > layer, maybe it's a passive thing.  I don't think I'm ready to plaster
my
> > keel with neoprene to try it out, but it makes me wonder if the flexible
> > layer couldn't react to impending turbulence and change shape just
enough
> to
> > keep the flow attached.
> >
> > Dave Shaddock
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: [email protected]
> > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of David Shugarts
> > Sent: Monday, March 17, 2008 12:14 PM
> > To: [email protected]
> > Subject: Re: catalina27-talk: Keel Fairing
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Hi, Dave--
> >
> > That's all true, more or less, but what I have a strong hunch you will
> find
> > is that these foils do not give us laminar flow at our speeds and angles
> of
> > attack.
> >
> > In other words, going to windward, I believe you would find that we are
> > nearly always in some form of turbulent flow, at some point in the keel
> > section, unlike aircraft, where we do get laminar flow most of the time,
> > over most of the wing.
> >
> > (BTW, the ratio of Reynolds numbers is 13:1, water versus air. Don't
hold
> me
> > to it, but I believe this is the practical consideration when modeling
> > foils.)
> >
> > These days, there are inexpensive underwater cameras that could perhaps
> show
> > us what our keels are doing. It isn't a fair comparison, but I get a
good
> > look at my rudder and it always looks like it's in some degree of
> turbulent
> > flow going to windward. (I have the old rudder, which is an
anachronism.)
> >
> > Regards,
> >
> > Dave S.
> >
> > PS-I am very familiar with the root versus tip design concept for
> beneficial
> > stall behavior in aircraft, and we could throw in wing twist if we
wanted
> to
> > complete the picture. And let's not even get started with Whitcomb
> winglets,
> > stall fences and stall strips, not to mention vortex generators.
> >
> >
> > On 3/17/08 12:31 PM, "David Shaddock" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > > The Cessnas and other aircraft sometimes use different foil shapes at
> the
> > > root and tip in order to make sure the inner part of the wing (closer
to
> > the
> > > fuselage) stalls first, making the aircraft dive and regain speed
while
> > > still providing some control out at the wingtips to avoid a spin.
This
> > > isn't an issue with sailboats.
> > >
> > > But our keels can still stall--the keel provides windward lift if it
> > doesn't
> > > stall, at the expense of some leeward slip.  If the keel stalls, you
> lose
> > > the lift and you see a lot more leeward slip/skidding.
> > >
> > > There are so many NACA profiles that it's hard to imagine anyone using
> > > something that's NOT a NACA profile--they have tested and published
> > results
> > > for hundreds of them, with some having only a tiny variation from
> others.
> > > But those tiny variations can make measurable differences, especially
> > since
> > > we're operating our profile in a medium 800 times denser than air.  I
> have
> > a
> > > book I used for aircraft design purposes that's got everything they
had
> > > published through about 1990.  At any rate, selection of the ideal
> profile
> > > for a sailboat involves knowing the aspect ratio as well as the target
> > > speeds.  For example, there is a concept called the lift/drag
bucket--a
> > > high-lift keel profile provides a lot of drag, but might be a
worthwhile
> > > price to pay if you're trying to achieve the best VMG in light air,
> > because
> > > at low speeds the drag doesn't hurt as much and adding lift while
> > minimizing
> > > leeward slippage pays off.  For higher speeds, a lower-lift profile
> works
> > > better because when the boat is moving faster through the water,
you'll
> > get
> > > a resultant increase in the actual lift windward and have less drag to
> > worry
> > > about--but overall you'll see more leeward slippage.
> > >
> > > A bulb at the bottom of the keel offers two things--for one thing, it
> > > minimizes the tip vortex (which adds a great deal to drag), but mainly
> it
> > > helps provide a lot of mass at the extreme draft, which provides more
> > > righting moment.  If the rules allow, you can carry more sail because
of
> > the
> > > extra righting, and you'll heel less which means more sail upright and
> > > working for you (although heeling may increase your waterline length
on
> > some
> > > hulls and raise your speed).  If the rules don't allow added sail, you
> can
> > > take advantage of the increased righting moment by cutting weight out
in
> > > other areas and you'll accelerate faster.
> > >
> > > The profile Tim has picked out for his sportboat is a good one; at the
> > > speeds he might be getting on a planning boat, he could probably have
> done
> > > well with a narrower profile, too, but this way he's covered for a
wide
> > > range of conditions.
> > >
> > > A lot of this information is in Steve Killing's book on Yacht Design
and
> > > also in Skene's Elements of Yacht Design--but the later publications
of
> > that
> > > are much more informed than the early ones).
> > >
> > > Dave Shaddock
> > >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: [email protected]
> > > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of David Shugarts
> > > Sent: Monday, March 17, 2008 10:52 AM
> > > To: [email protected]
> > > Subject: Re: catalina27-talk: Keel Fairing
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > Hi, Tim--
> > >
> > > I think your summation of it as "like a Chevy" is a pretty good
analogy.
> > To
> > > go back to the source, I have now heard Frank Butler answer a number
of
> > > sophisticated questions with what sure sounded like naivete to me, so
I
> > have
> > > a hunch that our factory keel section was a "oh, whatever" decision at
> the
> > > time. Then these better keel sections would naturally be an
improvement,
> > but
> > > only because the bar was set so low.
> > >
> > > It would be interesting to hear from an expert here, because I just
feel
> > as
> > > though the designers of the cool toys are way beyond NACA foils. Or
> > perhaps
> > > they really are more about the bulb than the keel section itself. For
> > > instance, if we could hang a heavy lead bulb on a carbon fiber keel,
we
> > > would probably do it, and we might find that ANY keel foil would be
fine
> > for
> > > the purpose.
> > >
> > > BTW, this link: http://www.hanleyinnovations.com/glossary.html, shows
a
> > few
> > > cases where the NACA 0012 was used in aircraft, but it also shows that
> > some
> > > venerable aircraft (e.g., the Cessna 150/152) had one foil at the wing
> > root
> > > and another at the tip (in other words, more sophisticated). Notably,
> the
> > > B-17 Flying Fortress had it as the root foil (love that airplane!).
> > >
> > > Regards,
> > >
> > > Dave S.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > On 3/17/08 12:03 AM, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >
> > >> I don't profess to have any knowledge whatsoever when it comes to
fluid
> > >> dynamics, I have just been going on threads on SA and bits and pieces
> of
> > >> knowledge that I've read from different designers.
> > >>
> > >> I think that as far as high performance (e.g., sport boats, hulls
that
> > >> will plane
> > >> off the wind) sailboats are concerned, a bulb on a keel foil is
pretty
> > >> much the
> > >> name of the game. Certainly heavy displacement and cruising boats
will
> > >> look toward other keel configurations. But the NACA foils offsets
have
> > > pretty
> > >> much been determined to be the go-to configurations for fast keel
> struts
> > >> in the sportboat world. There are a few arguments over whether a 0011
> > > section
> > >> might be faster than a 0012 seciton (with a resulting decrease in
> > >> strength/robustness
> > >> to loads, etc) for example, but the 0012 shape seems to be the chevy
> > >> pickup when
> > >> it comes to most foil sections below the waterline.
> > >>
> > >> These are fairly simple shapes. Pretty easy for an amateur to cut
with
> a
> > >> hot wire,
> > >> or for a CNC machine to do it.
> > > (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q7uvq4RlhHM)
> > >> I can certainly imagine that areonautical designers would have the
need
> > to
> > >> come up
> > >> with more complex shapes for specialized, shape-specific demands,
> > executed
> > >> at high speed with enormous G-force loads in the atmosphere, and new
> > >> materials and production techniques would allow for a huge amount of
> > >> variability when it comes to foil offsets these days.
> > >>
> > >> But these are just simple symmetrical foils shapes that you can order
> up
> > >> and get made pretty cheaply on-line...I just ordered a 54" piece of
> > >> spyderfoam cut to NACA0012 sections,
> > >> for about a hundred bux incl. delivery. It's a dream-world out there
> now
> > >> for home boat (or aircraft) builders!
> > >>
> > >> tf
> > >>
> > >>
> > >>
> > >>
> > >>> My ears perk up here. First, I confess ignorance. Are boat keels
based
> > on
> > >>> NACA foils, and do they apply to water, as opposed to air? Perhaps
> there
> > >>> was
> > >>> a series of NACA foils intended for water? I just never paid
attention
> > to
> > >>> that part of things, although I studied NACA airfoils for my own
> > purposes
> > >>> many years ago. I vaguely recall a factor called Reynolds Number
that
> > >>> would
> > >>> govern foils in various media, such as air and water. Can you
> elaborate?
> > >>>
> > >>> Regards,
> > >>>
> > >>> Dave S.
> > >>>
> > >>> PS--I was just a layman studying the foils at the time, but I went
> > > through
> > >>> them all pretty carefully. It seemed to me that they were kind of
> > > empircal
> > >>> in nature. I got the impression that the great virtue of a NACA
foil,
> > for
> > >>> an
> > >>> aircraft designer of the 1930s or 1940s, was that it was thoroughly
> > > tested
> > >>> and predictable. However, it seemed as though a lot of developments
of
> > >>> later
> > >>> decades, such as the Clark-Y, not to mention variable sweeps and
> tapers,
> > >>> variable chords and foils in a given wing, etc., began to favor
> > > departures
> > >>> from the NACA foils (except when mere predictability was the goal,
as
> in
> > >>> vertical stabilizer foils). So, although I later got into aviation
> > > writing
> > >>> and was constantly looking for NACA foils, I didn't find many in the
> > > wings
> > >>> of light aircraft. In my time, we saw NASA come out with the GAW-1,
> and
> > I
> > >>> have always assumed that later, composite aircraft designers were
free
> > to
> > >>> work with an infinitely variable foil in mind.
> > >>>
> > >>>
> > >>>
> > >>>
> > >>> On 3/16/08 8:40 PM, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >>>
> > >>>>>>> but they also value every advantage they can  get.
> > >>>>
> > >>>> key words^, huh?
> > >>>>
> > >>>> nice explanation, Chris.
> > >>>>
> > >>>> So I guess Compu-Keel is still around?
> > >>>>
> > >>>> http://www.compukeel.com/
> > >>>>
> > >>>> odd because you get NACA foil specs on-line for free...but I guess
> all
> > >>>> class
> > >>>> legal keels cant be derived from NACA sections.
> > >>>>
> > >>>> tf
> > >>>>
> > >>>>
> > >>>>
> > >>>
> > >>>
> > >>>
> > >>>
> > >>
> > >>
> > >>
> >
> >
> > --
> > Internal Virus Database is out-of-date.
> > Checked by AVG Free Edition.
> > Version: 7.5.516 / Virus Database: 269.19.16/1251 - Release Date:
> 1/30/2008 9:29 AM
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> Internal Virus Database is out-of-date.
> Checked by AVG Free Edition.
> Version: 7.5.516 / Virus Database: 269.19.16/1251 - Release Date:
1/30/2008 9:29 AM
>
>

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