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- Newsgroups: rec.boats
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!sdd.hp.com!hpscit.sc.hp.com!hplextra!rigel!dsmith
- From: dsmith@hplabsz.hpl.hp.com (David R. Smith)
- Subject: Re: Mercruiser questions
- Message-ID: <1992Dec24.172434.8281@hplabsz.hpl.hp.com>
- Date: Thu, 24 Dec 1992 17:24:34 GMT
- References: <725208595.AA00037@ship.wimsey.bc.ca>
- Organization: Hewlett-Packard Laboratories Palo Alto,CA
- Lines: 31
-
- In article <725208595.AA00037@ship.wimsey.bc.ca> Dan.Hannah@f764.n153.z1.ship.wimsey.bc.ca (Dan Hannah) writes:
- > GP> My boat has a strange tendency to "fishtail"...
- >
- >Try this: DON'T CORRECT it when it wanders. Sounds goofy, but if you just
- >let her go where she wants, she'll seems to straighten right out. The thing
- >I think I was doing was overcorrecting. It is weird, but true. Anyone else
- >have this experience?
-
- Certainly. I don't worry about it unless I am in or approaching tight
- quarters. But I have no problem with overcorrecting. I can keep my boat
- quite straight by slowly steering back and forth against the oscillation.
-
- I believe that the cause is the shedding of alternate vortices from the
- stern of the boat. With a deep-sitting stern and square cut-off transom,
- the water fills in behind the boat by welling up or rolling in from the
- side. The pure upwelling component does not affect directional stability,
- but the components coming in from the sides interact to form the alternating
- vortices you have probably seen in science shows depicting wind tunnel
- tests. As one vortex detaches to be replaced by its opposite counterpart,
- the side force on the stern switches direction.
-
- I wonder if the fishtailing could be tamed by a design which has a
- substantial radiusing of the transom's joint with the bottom and sides,
- coupled with a shallow step to allow water to cleanly separate while on
- plane. In a boat with integral swim platform, the bottom of the platform
- could be lowered to meet the stern near its bottom.
-
- --
- David R. Smith, HP Labs | "I like to get my hands dirty,
- dsmith@hpl.hp.com | because it stimulates my mind."
- (415) 857-7898 | -- Irwin Sobel
-