I saw a TV show filmed at North Sails showing how they make one of those A
Cup mainsails. They form a solid plug of wood, or similar, then lay laser
pre-cut pieces of kevlar, etc on the plug and sew it together with a giant
moving sewing needle on a CNC controlled machine in 3D.
The amazing thing
In a message dated 01/05/2000 8:33:45 AM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> They were driving this
> thing on what looked like a runway, (it wasn't the salt flats) but this
> was not the record attempt. They said they had already gone faster than
> the current record of (I bel
Hit the delete key if your not interested, sorry, but I find this
fascinating. Boy, during the winter, you guys will go on about anything.
;-) Honestly, I think there are a lot of applicable principles here, and
I am amazed at the number of RC soaring guys who are/have been sailors.
(I rec'd a lot
OK, here we go. There is true wind and there is apparent wind. Apparent wind is the
wind you feel if there is no wind and you're
on a bike and you start moving forward. It feels like there is wind, right?
Sailboats use wind and forward motion to work. Proper
sail trim is extremely important
At 10:47 PM 1/4/00 -0800, you wrote:
>Well, as others have pointed out, there are sail powered vehicles that can
>go faster then the actual wind (I'm still not quite sure how that works,
>but apparently it does). As for flat areas with lots of wind, you've got
>places like the Bonneville Salt Fla
At 11:06 PM 01/04/2000 -0800, Scobie Puchtler or Sarah Felstiner wrote:
>In reaction to a submission about a landsailer that could make speeds of
>120mph, Tracy recently wrote:
I should note that the car in question hadn't reached these speeds as of
the time the show was filmed. It was hoped it
Just think of ground wind speed the level sailvehicle is the thermal rise
speed to our sailplane.
YK Chan
Seatte area
In a message dated 1/4/00 10:55:44 PM Pacific Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
<< Well, as others have pointed out, there are sail powered vehicles that can
go fast
In reaction to a submission about a landsailer that could make speeds of
120mph, Tracy recently wrote:
> In a 120mph wind? Where do they find such wind with flat land to
> race on that
> isn't covered in dunes?
While 120mph is extreme speed for any sailcraft, it would not require winds
of 120mph
8 matches
Mail list logo