Forums > Land Yacht Sailing Construction

how big is too BIG

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Created by yankeesailor > 9 months ago, 25 Jan 2015
yankeesailor
56 posts
25 Jan 2015 2:08AM
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Hi fellow sailors. i have built a class 5 YOTT and have been using a used land yacht sail i was lucky enough to find on the internet that I was told is a 5 meter sail. The sail is not labeled anywhere like a windsurf sail with the square meter size or luff size so im taking the sellers word that it is a 5 meter. i have compared it to some BLO KART 4 meter sails and it is slightly larger and seems about right to be a 5 meter. So here is my question, We have had several very light wind days sailing here and with the wieght of my YOTT and my wieght i need a larger sail for days like this. I know class 5 rules restict the sail size to 5.5 m2 for racing but this is for recreation sailing on light wind days. HOW BIG A SAIL DO MANY OF YOU USE ON YOUR CLASS 5 YACHTS? i WAS THINKING OF MAKING A SAIL AROUND 7.0 -7.5 METERS. Do any of you use sails that big






Clemco
430 posts
27 Jan 2015 11:01AM
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If you cant get going with that sail in 3 to 5 knts on that concrete surface there is something seriously wrong somewhere.
My first thought is the mast looks like a standard windsurfer mast. Way too soft for a landyacht. Also once you fix that you will also need a stronger boom.
That sail is a New Zealand made Fed5 sail by Highwind sails . Nothing wrong with that. There is a plan to build an aluminium Class5 mast in my photos on here. They are bloody heavy but they work. A fibreglass equivalent would need to be at least 8mm wall thickness, for half its length, a carbon one maybe 6mm.
Next you could look at the batten shape. Also a photo on here of Fed5 battens compressed to show there shape.


These battens are from a Fed 5 sail exactly like yours. The figures along the bottom are in pounds.
Get some kitchen scales and compress each batten down on to the scales and you will find you get to a point where the poundage dose not increase anymore.
You also want the widest point of the bend to be approximately 25% back from the leading edge. That's the mark you can see along the top of the bend on each batten line. These ones are not perfect but it does not matter too much. Give it a try before you spend money on a bigger sail.


JohnHS
WA, 34 posts
27 Jan 2015 12:02PM
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Clemco said..

My first thought is the mast looks like a standard windsurfer mast. Way too soft for a landyacht.


Hay Clem
We have started using windsurfer masts because is very hard to get the correct ally here in AUS.

I use a full carbon 5.2m SDM race mast which has been fitted with 2m of internal reinforcement and 2 external wraps of extra glass to 300mm above the mast step.
When we tested the deflection of this mast beside Landyachts ally mast mine was noticeably less.

In short, windsurfer masts work very well if you have the right one and reinforce it properly.

Clemco
430 posts
27 Jan 2015 12:21PM
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John HS
Yes that sounds like what you would need. So what does the wall thickness end up at the base?
I would love to have a carbon mast if the Class5 rules were to change. My ally mast weighs over 10kg and is 10mm thick at the base with all the internal stiffeners. About time for a rule change if you ask me.

JohnHS
WA, 34 posts
27 Jan 2015 12:44PM
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Couldn't tell you the wall thickness.
Overall weight is a 3-4kg including reinforcement.

Internal reinforcing consists of inserting the top section of a second carbon mast into the base of the main mast and gluing it in place with urethane.

External reinforcing is 2 wraps of 50mm glass tape overlapped 50% I.e. 4 layers of glass up to 2x the height of the mast step.

Test pilot 1
WA, 1430 posts
27 Jan 2015 2:31PM
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A sail is too big when:- it becomes uncontrollable

landyacht
WA, 5921 posts
27 Jan 2015 8:31PM
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Re the sail size , perhaps you could tell us more about the wieght your sailing with the we can work from thier.
other things to consider are what you are doing to get going. on a man made surface you often get frustrated trying to get going because you are trying to follow a road opr runway. BUT you need to sail relative to the wind . Runways are usually placed in relation to prevailing winds!!!!!!! to get a head /tail situation.
re windsurfer masts. . for a class 5 you will need to start with a 5.6m IMCS 35 or 36 thats a big stiff mast,
then you need to add carbon or glass to the lower meter/half meter. we also addd an internal stiffener. as john said another mast top is perfect. fix that in with a tiny bit of epoxy or uerathane. john usedway too much which bumped the weight way up. the mast you start with will be about 2-2.5kg

yankeesailor
56 posts
28 Jan 2015 3:24AM
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I think maybe I wasnt clear but im not having a problem getting going on days that the wind is blowing above 10mph or more, the 5.0meter sail seems adequate. but i want a sail for very light days, which we have alot of lately (5 - 10mph). for my other land yacht and ice boat I have a quiver of several different size unmodifyed windsurf sails to use depeneding on the wind conditions, but for my class 5 it uses a specialized sail and i only have one the 5 meter. i was just wonering what size some of you have as your biggest sail for these kind of days. I plan to loft a sail from scratch and was planning to make one around a 7.0 meter. even the blo- karts have had a tough time getting moving lately and they almost never are slowed down. I just was curious if 7.0 meter thats sounds extreme. im currently using a 5.5m carbon/epoxy mast with a 28 IMCS. and a aluminum stiffiner at the base and a boom made from a carbon mast with a top section stuck inside as a stiffiner. I agree with Land yacht and Clemco I should start with a stiffer aluminum mast. Clem i have seem your YOTT posted with many different sails over time one which seems to be a light air sail and not as high and skinny as others

Clemco
430 posts
28 Jan 2015 6:18AM
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That US15 sail was actually better for stronger winds above 20knts. The new Frog sail I have is great up to 20knts but above 15knts I use a shorter softer stiffener in the mast so the mast will bend more and give me a flatter sail.
Stiff mast for light winds, soft mast for strong winds, means you can get more wind range from the same sail.
Opposite goes for battens. stiff battens for strong wind, soft battens for light.

Chook2
WA, 1244 posts
28 Jan 2015 1:36PM
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This is just a mock up on the Mini Mini but 9m2 is what I use on my 5.6 mini in light winds to 3 or 5 Knots.

Above that wind strength, I go down to 8.5, but my favourite go to sail is 6.7 up to 25 knots. That's what I sailed at the Lake Walyungup State titles.

I weight 108kgs, 238 pounds.

Hiko
1229 posts
28 Jan 2015 3:11PM
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Now there is a light wind sail!!! I wondered when you were going to chime in chook!

sn
WA, 2775 posts
28 Jan 2015 9:39PM
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Chook's minimini is awesome fun to mess about

it is soooooooooooo twitchy

stephen

yankeesailor
56 posts
29 Jan 2015 9:48AM
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Thanks Chook Thats the kind of info i was hoping for. im about the same weight as you and my YOTT is on the heavy side. so a sail larger than 5.5 meter is not unheard of. I will post my sail on sail making when finished. im just waiting for sail cloth to be delivered. Land Yacht and others have some great info on there sail building and its spot on compared to the sail I own now when i checked against it.

Chook2
WA, 1244 posts
29 Jan 2015 11:11AM
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Landyacht is a "master" in the sail design area (well all things land sailing really) and has helped me out no end. Cheers Paul.

I have been using cammed sails since I first got into land sailing mini's. (as I knew no different at the time)

My first sail was a cammed 5.7m2 recut at the luff.
When I first got to Lake Lefroy in 2011, Paul jumped into my yacht and was astounded that a cammed sail actually would work that well.

I have 5 cammed sails now. From 4.5m2 up. All have 3 or 4 camms and 6 to 8 battens.

Greg has been really pushing me hard locally, to improve the performance of my cammed sails and we have been having a ball.

The windsurfer market is HUGE compared to ours and if the competition is beating you in a ocean race then your sail needs to be faster.
Its big racing and promoting their sail sales. Lots of dollars involved.
Also a graphic change for each model sail is needed, so your not seen to be flying last weeks design.

Our thought process is that windsurfers carry a LOT of sail area at VERY high speed, (up to 7m2 in 25knots and achieving speeds of 40 knots plus, in these winds) so why reinvent the wheel. Lets just go with modern sail design and do the same on land.

This is proving to be the case. The cammed sails point very high up wind and down wind they really fly.
Cross wind the sail twists off above the 3 batten so they are very user friendly. 2 wheels are the norm on a broad reach. (lot less drag than 3)

The mast is the tricky bit, getting it to match the sail both in it's IMCS and still be stiff enough for base mounting. (still sorting this out)

On my latest mini (I won the state titles with at Lake Wallyungup with 6.7m2 of sail) my mast was supported internally at the base and the step was mounted at negative 3 degrees. That's right, forward 3 degrees from upright. This gets the luff curve set correctly and the centre of effort exactly where it needs to be to balance the yacht when fully sheeted in. The steering was "point and shoot" it tracked like it was on rails.

Back to the shed now, I have lots to improve on.

Hope this helps.

Clemco
430 posts
29 Jan 2015 1:29PM
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landyacht said..
Re the sail size , perhaps you could tell us more about the wieght your sailing with the we can work from thier.
other things to consider are what you are doing to get going. on a man made surface you often get frustrated trying to get going because you are trying to follow a road opr runway. BUT you need to sail relative to the wind . Runways are usually placed in relation to prevailing winds!!!!!!! to get a head /tail situation.
re windsurfer masts. . for a class 5 you will need to start with a 5.6m IMCS 35 or 36 thats a big stiff mast,
then you need to add carbon or glass to the lower meter/half meter. we also addd an internal stiffener. as john said another mast top is perfect. fix that in with a tiny bit of epoxy or uerathane. john usedway too much which bumped the weight way up. the mast you start with will be about 2-2.5kg


Well I just did the IMCS measure system on my 5.1 long aluminium Class5 mast. Had it supported 50mm from each end as directed. hung 30 kg at the mid point.
The deflection was only 100mm. According to their formula. That gives my mast a IMSC rating of 59. Nearly twice your average carbon windsurfer mast.
Do the maths yourself. How does yours stack up?

tryhard
222 posts
29 Jan 2015 1:42PM
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By the way you have made a very nice job of your build.Congratulations.

landyacht
WA, 5921 posts
29 Jan 2015 9:09PM
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WOW

yankeesailor
56 posts
30 Jan 2015 11:32AM
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Chook2 said..
Landyacht is a "master" in the sail design area (well all things land sailing really) and has helped me out no end. Cheers Paul.

I have been using cammed sails since I first got into land sailing mini's. (as I knew no different at the time)

My first sail was a cammed 5.7m2 recut at the luff.
When I first got to Lake Lefroy in 2011, Paul jumped into my yacht and was astounded that a cammed sail actually would work that well.

I have 5 cammed sails now. From 4.5m2 up. All have 3 or 4 camms and 6 to 8 battens.

Greg has been really pushing me hard locally, to improve the performance of my cammed sails and we have been having a ball.

The windsurfer market is HUGE compared to ours and if the competition is beating you in a ocean race then your sail needs to be faster.
Its big racing and promoting their sail sales. Lots of dollars involved.
Also a graphic change for each model sail is needed, so your not seen to be flying last weeks design.

Our thought process is that windsurfers carry a LOT of sail area at VERY high speed, (up to 7m2 in 25knots and achieving speeds of 40 knots plus, in these winds) so why reinvent the wheel. Lets just go with modern sail design and do the same on land.

This is proving to be the case. The cammed sails point very high up wind and down wind they really fly.
Cross wind the sail twists off above the 3 batten so they are very user friendly. 2 wheels are the norm on a broad reach. (lot less drag than 3)

The mast is the tricky bit, getting it to match the sail both in it's IMCS and still be stiff enough for base mounting. (still sorting this out)

On my latest mini (I won the state titles with at Lake Wallyungup with 6.7m2 of sail) my mast was supported internally at the base and the step was mounted at negative 3 degrees. That's right, forward 3 degrees from upright. This gets the luff curve set correctly and the centre of effort exactly where it needs to be to balance the yacht when fully sheeted in. The steering was "point and shoot" it tracked like it was on rails.

Back to the shed now, I have lots to improve on.

Hope this helps.




Clemco said..



landyacht said..
Re the sail size , perhaps you could tell us more about the wieght your sailing with the we can work from thier.
other things to consider are what you are doing to get going. on a man made surface you often get frustrated trying to get going because you are trying to follow a road opr runway. BUT you need to sail relative to the wind . Runways are usually placed in relation to prevailing winds!!!!!!! to get a head /tail situation.
re windsurfer masts. . for a class 5 you will need to start with a 5.6m IMCS 35 or 36 thats a big stiff mast,
then you need to add carbon or glass to the lower meter/half meter. we also addd an internal stiffener. as john said another mast top is perfect. fix that in with a tiny bit of epoxy or uerathane. john usedway too much which bumped the weight way up. the mast you start with will be about 2-2.5kg




Well I just did the IMCS measure system on my 5.1 long aluminium Class5 mast. Had it supported 50mm from each end as directed. hung 30 kg at the mid point.
The deflection was only 100mm. According to their formula. That gives my mast a IMSC rating of 59. Nearly twice your average carbon windsurfer mast.
Do the maths yourself. How does yours stack up?


Thanks Chook 2 very helpful and intresting stuff. Just wondering why do people not want to use cammed sail on land yachts? because they dont tack well ? or because they want a flatter sail on land and cams would keep the sail full shape? and I agree mast curve is going to be the tricky part, I perpared for some trial and error on getting that correct. i plan on starting with my current sails luff curve as a template. it seems to fit my mast well now.

And Wow clem I cant believe the stiffness of your ally. mast over a carbon/epoxy mast. One thing im wondering is some folks are hoping the Class 5 rule would change to allow Carbon windsurfer mast. I understand that the Aluminum is not readily available in alot of areas and it would solve a problem source a mast. But some feel the mast is way to soft for land sailing without extra reinforcement. would you not perfer an aluminum mast in competition

Clemco
430 posts
30 Jan 2015 12:38PM
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Did the 30 kg weight test again just to be sure. This time put the support at where mast comes out at the mast step. The length is now 4800.
The offset was only 80mm with the 30 kg weight at mid span. (measured it wrong last time) That gives me a IMCS stiffness of 65.
As I said I would love to have a carbon mast but it would have to be at least 5 to 6mm wall thickness and would probably weigh 5kg.
Still heaps better than my 10+Kg mast.

Clemco
430 posts
31 Jan 2015 8:12AM
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Just did the same deflection test with the "soft" stiffener I use in my mast. The net deflection was 90mm.
Not much different from the stiff mast but I can tell you it makes a lot of difference to the depth of camber I get. i.e. flatter sail.

Chook2
WA, 1244 posts
31 Jan 2015 9:42AM
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Select to expand quote
Thanks Chook 2 very helpful and intresting stuff. Just wondering why do people not want to use cammed sail on land yachts? because they dont tack well ? or because they want a flatter sail on land and cams would keep the sail full shape? and I agree mast curve is going to be the tricky part, I perpared for some trial and error on getting that correct. i plan on starting with my current sails luff curve as a template. it seems to fit my mast well now.



I know you are talking class 5 and I'm on a cammed mini sail. I'd love a cammed 5 sail though.

It seems to be setting them up they have the problem getting the cambers onto the mast. Well all the guys I talk to anyway.
They have been frustrated and give up, trying to get then on or to stay on the mast.
I must admit I went through that phase too, till you get the correct rig and derig sequence right.
The downhaul and sheet tension is REALLY important and they just click into place when this is done properly.

We leave the luff in it's original condition and get the mast to match as this is the way the sail is designed to work. The sail is designed to use a particular bend. Also it is a huge amount of work to get it set correctly after recutting it. The sail is cut down if needed, to size along the leech at the rear trying to reuse all the hardware.

Modern cammed race sails have huge luff pockets up to 400mm wide and this really helps setting them up to as you can access the cambers really easily to clip them on.

The downhaul tension on these race sails are HUGE.
6 to 1 or mine were originally 8 to 1 and as hard as I can pull with my foot on the mast base with the cord wrapped round my hand several times for purchase.


The really nice thing is the sail will bag out easily with just a small amount of downhaul tension removed, which is great in low wind races and if the wind increases (which it did at Lake Walyungup last weekend) you reapply downhaul pulling more through the cleated downhaul while sailing and it flattens the sail right out again.

The best bit is while the yacht is parked ready to go, the sail is sitting in it's best possible shape to power away. There is not a single wrinkle in the sail, it's as tight as a drum skin and there is no sheet rope tension even applied yet. You are stationary and the tell tales are streaming begging you to go. This is where I seemed to have the biggest advantage it powers away with very light winds. I muffed most of my starts keeping out of others way and had to catch up to the field every time.

There certainly wasn't much in it at higher speeds against other yachts except they were on around 4mtr sails and I had 6.7m2 which was totally controllable when downhauled fully. Also it went like stink down wind.


Where did you get your "how to calculate your IMCS" info Clemco? I'll have a measure to compare.

Cheers.



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"how big is too BIG" started by yankeesailor