How do deeper fins giv earlier planing / pointing

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sboardcrazy
sboardcrazy
NSW
8333 posts
NSW, 8333 posts
5 Dec 2009 6:21pm
In laymans terms please. I can understand how they prevent leeway..Also how are you supposed to sail upwind & use your fin. Ive read you have to push against them but generally if I do that I spin out..Does this only refer to recent boards ( last 10years)..
Also any other design features that help going upwind.I seem to spend all my life trying to get upwind to bear off a bit while others are having fun reaching past..
Mark _australia
Mark _australia
WA
23647 posts
WA, 23647 posts
5 Dec 2009 3:33pm
Lift. Lots of it.

A long skinny wing / foil generates more lift than a short fat one. Think of gliders .... they have no power source so are designed to generate maximum lift for a given wing area.

As for pushing.... well, you drive against the fin as much as you can without spinning out

But just pushing ("driving off") the fin will not get you upwind. You still need weight forward a bit so as to engage more waterline, and keep the board level, and push against the fin laterally. ... and unpteen other little factors to help get upwind. I find sometimes when just barely planing that taking my front hand off the boom enables me to twist my torso forward (chest facing front of the board, not just my face) and that gets me those extra few degrees..... this is waveboard though......
Harness lines forward a bit can help - if you can sail on a reach with hands off the boom for couple secs and the sail doesn't move, that is great and well tuned, but harness lines forward about half an inch will help you open up the sail as you need to sheet out a smidge when sailing upwind.

Mobydisc
Mobydisc
NSW
9029 posts
NSW, 9029 posts
5 Dec 2009 6:41pm
I'm no expert on fins. I guess at one extreme a board without a fin will just go sideways and cannot point upwind unless the sailor is skilled and can engage the board to try to keep on track.

At the other extreme you get the formula board fins at 70cms. As Mark says its all about lift. As a board with a larger planing area develops more lift and a larger sail generally generates more lift, a bigger fin will generate more lift as water flows past it.

What size fin do you use now? I'm usually use a 48cm fin on my big board up to about 20 knots and go down to a 20cm fin in really windy conditions.

Wineman
Wineman
NSW
1412 posts
NSW, 1412 posts
5 Dec 2009 7:44pm
Sue,
also try an outhaul kit. ( just got one recently)
Pull it on & you can get up wind a lot better, then let it off for reaching or off the wind.

Plus what they said....
petermac33
petermac33
WA
6415 posts
WA, 6415 posts
5 Dec 2009 4:49pm
a fin with a thicker foil,thats the leading edge i think, will lift board higher out of the water than thinner edged fin.

use a stiff carbon fin, leading edge b3, not b4 are best fins for going upwind...a softer fin like techtronics are worst.

put all your weight on your backleg, then apply this weight to leeward rail[pressing down with toes and/or lifting heal]. this should rail board up, meaning board is planning on far away rail.

maintain this board angle for as long as possible by trimming board with back leg.

sailing upwind i try to put all weight on backleg, leeward side leg, but upper body i push forward towards nose of board.

hope this helps a little.
Ian K
Ian K
WA
4169 posts
WA, 4169 posts
5 Dec 2009 6:27pm
A larger fin has less drag at low speed. Helps getting on the plane and upwind where the speed is lower. A small fin needs too much angle of attack to generate the required lift at low speeds, a high angle of attack = high induced drag.

Getting upwind is all about reducing drag. At constant speed drag will balance the forward component of lift provided by the sail. Excess sail lift in the forward direction or lower drag allows you to point higher. (or go faster) By pointing higher the sails forward component of lift is reduced until it matches drag again. And at pointing speeds that's a lower value of drag if you have a bigger fin.

Sharper rails also help early planing and upwind performance by reducing drag with cleaner water release.
Mark _australia
Mark _australia
WA
23647 posts
WA, 23647 posts
5 Dec 2009 6:38pm
OH yeah and PlonkMan's post also reminded me -

More downhaul sometimes.
If you rig with insufficient downhaul the sail is very powerful, but the luff collapses when trying to point hi, due to insufficient skin tension (in the sail / foil).
This is probably not quite so apparent on cambered sails (I have not raced enough to say)

Many times on wave gear I have been planing easily (but not fully powered) and just can't get upwind. I pull on 10mm more downhaul and the board planes just as early.... but suddenly will go upwind.

Gestalt
Gestalt
QLD
14953 posts
QLD, 14953 posts
5 Dec 2009 9:41pm
hmm, not sure i agree with most of the stuff written in this thread so far.

my understanding is

a deep fin doesn't really give more lift. lift is about fin area and thickness. a deep fin will have less drag than a short fat fin due to aspect ratio.

also a thick fin cord, gives more lift but creates more drag.

deep fins do however flex which does increase the lift component in an upwards direction. so a deep flexy fin will hgave more lift than a deep stiff fin of the same area and thickness.

to confuse things, 2 fins with the same foil thickness but with one foil towards the leading edge of the fin and the other with the foil towards the middle of the fin will also show different drag ratios. normally the fin with the foil towards the middle will have less drag.

now with deep fins, rake will also affect upwind performance. the more upright the better it will go upwind, and the more rake, the better it will be off the wind.

sailing upwind you need more outhaul so there is a finer entry on the sail which reduces drag and stall. also increasing downhaul as mark says will do the same.
ultimately you want less draft or a draft set further back in the sail and good leach twist to go upwind.

downhaul should be set for the apparent wind strength to allow the sail to breath correctly.

once on the water outhaul is used to tweak the sail. in other words, if you are doing a lot of upwind sailing give your sail more outhaul, if you are doing a lot of reaching let the outhaul off a little. general sailing is somewhere in the middle.

most modern sails have a downhaul adjustment range of about 3-4cm while outhaul range can be 8+cm.

with your board it depends on rail type. a tucked or round rail like on a wave board will mean you need to pressure the windward rail down to go to windward. a hard slalom rail means you can rail the board ie- lift the windward rail to improve upwind performance which engages more rail to increase resistance and also gets more wind under the board to help keep it planing.

from what i understand, pro sailors do not rail the board on slalom boards. a flat board is a fast board. railing is only used when they have either pointed too high or hit a lull. typically on slalom boards, railing the board upsets the board and slows you down.

hope this helps.
Mark _australia
Mark _australia
WA
23647 posts
WA, 23647 posts
5 Dec 2009 8:04pm
Gestalt

I never said a deeper fin makes more lift. I said I higher aspect ratio fin (that is, for a given area of fin, longer and thinner makes more lift than short and fat)
I only alluded to the part about aspect ratio for a given area of foil as the O.P said keep it simple
Therefore a 30cm pointer goes upwind better and planes earlier than a 23cm wave fin of same area. Fact.

Chord does not refer to thickness it relates to the length of the fin parallel to the flow (from leading edge to trailing edge.

A thick foil does create more lift but more drag.

Rake affects lift and therefore upwind ability as the same fin but raked back increases chord lenght and therefore changes the aspect ratio..... in effect making the same foil / fin / wing behave a little like it now has a lower aspect ratio.


Gestalt
Gestalt
QLD
14953 posts
QLD, 14953 posts
5 Dec 2009 10:32pm
Hi Mark,

i wasn't just referring to your post but again, lift is about area and thickness not aspect ratio. aspect ratio effects drag.

yep point taken on chord... should have said chord ratio

so the 30cm pointer versus the wave fin, really depends on chord ratio and area as to which one will plane first. but as you say the pointer fin will go upwind better.

edit* removed another red thumb for you. your stalker has conviction.

Mark _australia said...


Gestalt

I never said a deeper fin makes more lift. I said I higher aspect ratio fin (that is, for a given area of fin, longer and thinner makes more lift than short and fat)
I only alluded to the part about aspect ratio for a given area of foil as the O.P said keep it simple
Therefore a 30cm pointer goes upwind better and planes earlier than a 23cm wave fin of same area. Fact.

Chord does not refer to thickness it relates to the length of the fin parallel to the flow (from leading edge to trailing edge.

A thick foil does create more lift but more drag.

Rake affects lift and therefore upwind ability as the same fin but raked back increases chord lenght and therefore changes the aspect ratio..... in effect making the same foil / fin / wing behave a little like it now has a lower aspect ratio.





petermac33
petermac33
WA
6415 posts
WA, 6415 posts
6 Dec 2009 3:43am
agree with most comments here but....gestalt says increasing downhaul will improve upwind performance.

increasing downhaul from my exp improves feel heaps,improves topend, better off the wind and a little safer if a freak gust hits you. also helps to close gap between sail + board.

downside is takes longer to plane, does not plane thru lulls as well and biggest downside is pointing angle is significantly reduced.

this may not apply on a wave/freeride sail with centre of power nowhere near as stable.

may not apply also if you choose too large a sail for board size

however a general rule is a tight leach is heaps better for pointing angle than a loose leached sail.

slowboat rigs with lots of downhaul and relative to his ability is hopeless at getting upwind.




sboardcrazy
sboardcrazy
NSW
8333 posts
NSW, 8333 posts
6 Dec 2009 9:00am
petermac33 said...

agree with most comments here but....gestalt says increasing downhaul will improve upwind performance.

increasing downhaul from my exp improves feel heaps,improves topend, better off the wind and a little safer if a freak gust hits you. also helps to close gap between sail + board.

downside is takes longer to plane, does not plane thru lulls as well and biggest downside is pointing angle is significantly reduced.

this may not apply on a wave/freeride sail with centre of power nowhere near as stable.

may not apply also if you choose too large a sail for board size

however a general rule is a tight leach is heaps better for pointing angle than a loose leached sail.

slowboat rigs with lots of downhaul and relative to his ability is hopeless at getting upwind.






Seems I have conflicting needs..I like to get upwind ( especially in slight side offshore conditions ) so I can then bear off & have fun & feel " safe" to get home if the wind dies BUT I get overpowered easily as i don't weigh much so i often really downhaul the sail.So it sounds like if I do that my early planing & busting through the lulls is compromised..? My current fin is inadequate but I can't afford much so I will only be getting a cheapie.I have a " freeride..? " 30 cm fin that came with the Hi Fly.I got some larger fins for my waveboard last season & they worked much better but now I have a floatier board for light winds & unfortunately its powerbox so i cant use the fins I bought for the waveboard ( tuttle box)..grr.
Also Ill have to compromise as I dont want to make the board too hard to gybe..just want to feel I can get upwind so i can then have some fun.
Thanks for all the tips..Ill have to digest them .

Gestalt
Gestalt
QLD
14953 posts
QLD, 14953 posts
6 Dec 2009 10:19am
petermac33 said...

agree with most comments here but....gestalt says increasing downhaul will improve upwind performance.

increasing downhaul from my exp improves feel heaps,improves topend, better off the wind and a little safer if a freak gust hits you. also helps to close gap between sail + board.

downside is takes longer to plane, does not plane thru lulls as well and biggest downside is pointing angle is significantly reduced.

this may not apply on a wave/freeride sail with centre of power nowhere near as stable.

may not apply also if you choose too large a sail for board size

however a general rule is a tight leach is heaps better for pointing angle than a loose leached sail.

slowboat rigs with lots of downhaul and relative to his ability is hopeless at getting upwind.







somehow feels like de ja vu

my point in increasing downhaul can help upwind is that it gives you a finer entry and opens the leach up which all reduce drag going upwind.

but as i have said in this thread and on other threads, increasing OUTHAUL is the the best way to increase upwind performance.

slowboats upwind performance would be because he rigs his sails to be fast off the wind which also means he would use very little to no outhaul producing a deep forward draft in his sails. if he was to increase outhaul and keep his downhaul the same he would go upwind faster and more efficiently.

the Koncept for eg was not designed to be the fastest sail to the top of the course. it is designed as a high speed blaster. that said the KA boys set the sails with more outhaul for slalom racing. now he is on Pryde i am certain it would be the same outcome. he rigs his sails for off the wind.

so on a short board a tight leach is bad for upwind.

to be honest every racer or top speed sailor on this forum increases outhaul to go upwind. whether via an adjustable outhaul other means.
sboardcrazy
sboardcrazy
NSW
8333 posts
NSW, 8333 posts
6 Dec 2009 12:05pm
Gestalt said...

petermac33 said...

agree with most comments here but....gestalt says increasing downhaul will improve upwind performance.

increasing downhaul from my exp improves feel heaps,improves topend, better off the wind and a little safer if a freak gust hits you. also helps to close gap between sail + board.

downside is takes longer to plane, does not plane thru lulls as well and biggest downside is pointing angle is significantly reduced.

this may not apply on a wave/freeride sail with centre of power nowhere near as stable.

may not apply also if you choose too large a sail for board size

however a general rule is a tight leach is heaps better for pointing angle than a loose leached sail.

slowboat rigs with lots of downhaul and relative to his ability is hopeless at getting upwind.







somehow feels like de ja vu

my point in increasing downhaul can help upwind is that it gives you a finer entry and opens the leach up which all reduce drag going upwind.

but as i have said in this thread and on other threads, increasing OUTHAUL is the the best way to increase upwind performance.

slowboats upwind performance would be because he rigs his sails to be fast off the wind which also means he would use very little to no outhaul producing a deep forward draft in his sails. if he was to increase outhaul and keep his downhaul the same he would go upwind faster and more efficiently.

the Koncept for eg was not designed to be the fastest sail to the top of the course. it is designed as a high speed blaster. that said the KA boys set the sails with more outhaul for slalom racing. now he is on Pryde i am certain it would be the same outcome. he rigs his sails for off the wind.

so on a short board a tight leach is bad for upwind.

to be honest every racer or top speed sailor on this forum increases outhaul to go upwind. whether via an adjustable outhaul other means.

Tight leech..
I thought more downhaul opens up the leech..or does it just twist the top..? to spill excess wind/depower the sail if your overpowered..? So more outhaul conteracts this..? I'm used to yacht sails where the leech has provisions to just tightened in isolation.
Sorry I just reread your post..opening the top reduces drag..I tried to delete my reply but I couldnt..

windsufering
windsufering
VIC
1124 posts
VIC, 1124 posts
6 Dec 2009 12:07pm
sink the rail to climb up wind also
Ellobuddha
Ellobuddha
NSW
625 posts
NSW, 625 posts
6 Dec 2009 12:28pm
I think body position is important. Need to get your weight forward. Leaning forward so as if you are trying to look around front of mast is the go and point your head and shoulders upwind, not parallel to board (if someone can explain that better please do)
RumChaser
RumChaser
TAS
633 posts
TAS, 633 posts
6 Dec 2009 3:07pm
Another trick which might help is to try to get upwind in a series of bursts. What I mean is to get going as fast as you can and then head further upwind until you nearly drop off the plane, then bear off a little to once again pick up speed.
petermac33
petermac33
WA
6415 posts
WA, 6415 posts
6 Dec 2009 4:07pm
increasing downhaul will result in finer entry + less drag upwind but...

pointing at steep angle you are sailing at low speed + most of time you need all the power you can.

my absolute fav rig for getting upwind in smallish equipment is..

f2 thommen x/speed 64 wide 110litres, with 36 carbon/composite fin, + 5.8m rs6 rigged with minimum downhaul[to first batten down] and massive negative outhaul.

this fullness in sail means i can continue to point in lulls when others have to bear away back onto reach to maintain power.

also a smaller sail on a comparatively bigger board makes board come alive in terms of lifting high out of water. esp if you put decent size fin in.

this lifting makes it easier to plane on leeward rail.

sailing upwind i try to get board as high as possible out of water + surf the swell/chop rather than go thru it.
Gestalt
Gestalt
QLD
14953 posts
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6 Dec 2009 8:29pm
Hi peter,

i'm not sure why you are focussing on the downhaul comment. why it was mentioned was because an underdownhauled sail has too much drag and no chance of going upwind.

as i said above to improve upwind performance of a sail (ie, a correctly downhauled sail) pulling on another 2cm of OUTHAUL will improve upwind performance dramatically.

obviously with all things in life it can be over done.

the reason you are bagging your sail out in an effort to go upwind is because your sail is not working efficiently as it is under downhauled so you are needing power instead of performance to try and get upwind. increasing the top end of your sails performance will increase speed which in turn increases power. increasing board speed increase apparent wind speed and again increases power.

the reality is your 5.8m RS6 is a sail typically used in 30+ knots.

i guess we agree to dissagree. but at least ask some pro and expert sailors on other forums before taking my amateur word for it. i'd be interested to see what they think also.
sboardcrazy
sboardcrazy
NSW
8333 posts
NSW, 8333 posts
6 Dec 2009 10:51pm
Gestalt said...

Hi peter,

i'm not sure why you are focussing on the downhaul comment. why it was mentioned was because an underdownhauled sail has too much drag and no chance of going upwind.

as i said above to improve upwind performance of a sail (ie, a correctly downhauled sail) pulling on another 2cm of OUTHAUL will improve upwind performance dramatically.

obviously with all things in life it can be over done.

the reason you are bagging your sail out in an effort to go upwind is because your sail is not working efficiently as it is under downhauled so you are needing power instead of performance to try and get upwind. increasing the top end of your sails performance will increase speed which in turn increases power. increasing board speed increase apparent wind speed and again increases power.

the reality is your 5.8m RS6 is a sail typically used in 30+ knots.

i guess we agree to dissagree. but at least ask some pro and expert sailors on other forums before taking my amateur word for it. i'd be interested to see what they think also.

A 5.8m sail in over 30kts..? Cripes you'd have to weigh 120kgs!+ about 18kts max for me!

sboardcrazy
sboardcrazy
NSW
8333 posts
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6 Dec 2009 10:53pm
Iceman said...

Another trick which might help is to try to get upwind in a series of bursts. What I mean is to get going as fast as you can and then head further upwind until you nearly drop off the plane, then bear off a little to once again pick up speed.

Sounds good but a lot of the time there isnt enough wind for me to plane very well .. although that could be technique at times..

NotWal
NotWal
QLD
7436 posts
QLD, 7436 posts
6 Dec 2009 10:40pm
sboardcrazy said...

In laymans terms please. I can understand how they prevent leeway..Also how are you supposed to sail upwind & use your fin. Ive read you have to push against them but generally if I do that I spin out..Does this only refer to recent boards ( last 10years)..
Also any other design features that help going upwind.I seem to spend all my life trying to get upwind to bear off a bit while others are having fun reaching past..


You don't need a big fin. Big lumps of sailors on little wave boards manage it nicely.

I remember with the older longer short boards we used to rail them a tad (sink leeward rail a bit), lean miles forward with zero weight on the front foot and lean the rig all the way back (close the gap) and be careful not to over sheet.

Shorter boards seem to respond to less extreme technique but the principles are the same 1) lean forward 2) unweight front foot 3) rig back a bit and don't over sheet.
The board runs more efficiently if you don't rail it because then its trying to foot steer downwind while the rig is trying to rig steer upwind.

Because your apparent wind drops a lot when close to the wind and just planing (I assume that's your case sbc) you get better lift from your sail if you bag it out a bit assuming you have an adjustable outhaul. If you tend to rig small then its a good idea to leave it pretty baggy imho, and use a drafty sail not a flat one.

my 2 bob's worth
Gestalt
Gestalt
QLD
14953 posts
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6 Dec 2009 10:53pm
i went in search of an experts opinion and found this from peter hart called the upwind challenge.

Sail Set
Avoid the extremes. If you bag the sail out too much in search of power it becomes inefficient. It can't exhaust, feels heavy in the hands and drives you sideways.
With too little outhaul, the sail goes back handed. You'll then direct the pressure into the back foot and risk overloading the fin.
Too much outhaul (and downhaul) and you pull the guts out of the sail, flatten the foil too much and end up going nowhere.

High boom.
Sailing upwind in moderate winds, your sheeting angle is closed - i.e. you'll be sheeted right in with the foot of the sail over the board's centre-line. If you have a low boom, under about shoulder height, your back-side will be skimming the waves. A higher boom leaves you in a more upright stance with your legs driving against the rails at a more efficient angle. Adjustable harness lines can also you're your cause especially on bigger free-ride kit. Racers tend to shorten their lines from about 30 down to or the upwind leg as it lifts their hips and makes the board sail more off the fin.

Fine size
The obvious way to help you sail upwind is to fit a bigger fin - but be cautious. Stay within the recommendations. The 133 Futura, for example, is designed to accommodate fins from about 40-50 cm. When you're setting out, you're often not making best use of the power and perhaps not sailing as fast and precisely as you should. The bigger fin will give you more lift and resistance at slow speeds. You can use a bit of back foot and lean on it when you're barely planing, and still get a positive reaction. It's your instant upwind companion. A possible down side is that a big fin can make you lazy and heavy footed. Ultimately a smaller fin will behave better in the manoeuvres AND drive you upwind just as well - you just have to sail faster.

TACTICS
You can improve your upwind performance tenfold just by being smarter. Tactics in this area is a massive subject but I'll limit myself to just 2 key tips.
1. Don't waste ground. Liken upwind sailing to rowing upstream on a river. Every time you lose concentration or stop to pick your nose, you lose ground.
The most popular mistake is to leave the beach off the plane and just drift off on a broad reach. Even without a daggerboard, it's possible to sail higher upwind off the plane than on the plane. Use the windward rail for extra resistance. Stand forward of the straps, press on the heels to sink it, steer upwind until you find that point where the board stops tracking and starts crabbing sideways. Having made ground upwind, you feel good about bearing away in the gusts to get planing.

2. Quick starts. Standing, lying, sitting in the water with your kit, in a force four you drift downwind ant about 1 kph = a slow walk. Now you may claim that you don't uphaul or waterstartt deliberately slowly and that if you could get going more quickly, you would but … actually a loit of peopke do waste a liot of time, cursing their luck/incompetence or floating around having a breather. A few points here:
1. The best to have a rest is in the shallows with your feet on the seabed.
2. The longer you hang arounbd before trying to recover the rig and waterstart, the harder it is as the rig has time to sink.

3. Clock the shifts. Spotting and reacting to changes in the wind direction sounds like the domain of the pro racer. In reality, at a basic level, it's quite easy and, at many locations, is officially the easiest way to make massive leaps upwind
Rubby
Rubby
65 posts
65 posts
6 Dec 2009 11:06pm
sboardcrazy said...

In laymans terms please. I can understand how they prevent leeway..Also how are you supposed to sail upwind & use your fin. Ive read you have to push against them but generally if I do that I spin out..Does this only refer to recent boards ( last 10years)..
Also any other design features that help going upwind.I seem to spend all my life trying to get upwind to bear off a bit while others are having fun reaching past..


There's no such thing as layman's terms in sailing. Earlier planing and pointing are birds of a different feather. I assume you are calling a fin with more span (length) as a deeper fin, but it's a fallacy to think that span length has much to do with early planing. It has a lot to do with pointing, though. Cord width determines your early planing factor. as you increase your cord you increase your lift at slow speeds. As you increase your span you increase your ability to point. Higher aspect fins are better pointers than their counterpart which plane earlier. In addition high aspect fins are faster once on a plane. Now, if you are having trouble going upwind, you should get out of the reaching straps, slow down and sink your rail.
petermac33
petermac33
WA
6415 posts
WA, 6415 posts
7 Dec 2009 2:33am
i had read this peter hart article before.sounds good in theory, but gestalt sorry for being stubborn, less downhaul still equals higher pointing angles[unless wind is too strong].

i sail downwind to peli /point twice per week, around 2kms from lucky bay.

i am slow going downwind to peli/point but on way back to lucky bay i think i have it sussed.

have experimented with so many different settings on sail to get that extra one percent.

if wind was consistently more than 20knots then a bit more downhaul may get me higher pointing angle. 25knots+ then definately.
KEVKEV
KEVKEV
74 posts
74 posts
7 Dec 2009 4:17am
Im not going to comment of fins etc but i think what is being asked is how to get upwind better as opposed to fin aspect etc...i allways had trouble getting upwind as everyone alse was zapping past me( exactly the same as your issue ! ; i would slog away upwind scared of having to do the walk of shame wondering why i wasnt planing like every one else !!)...these are a couple of things i put into practice which helped straight away...bear off and get planing well( even a bit downwind !!)..get some speed..tilt the whole rig towards the back of the board...lift up in the forward footstrap and push the opposite way with the rear strap( almost as if you are trying to "twist the board via your feet"...this will drive the board upwind via the fin and the opposite rail of the board...remember SPEED is the key...dont panic about having to go across or downwind a bit to get planing..pick up speed quickly and then use the fin and rail to drive upwind...thats my 10 cents worth ...good luck
KEVKEV
KEVKEV
74 posts
74 posts
7 Dec 2009 4:21am
Im not going to comment of fins etc but i think what is being asked is how to get upwind better as opposed to fin aspect etc...i allways had trouble getting upwind as everyone alse was zapping past me( exactly the same as your issue ! ; i would slog away upwind scared of having to do the walk of shame wondering why i wasnt planing like every one else !!)...these are a couple of things i put into practice which helped straight away...bear off and get planing well( even a bit downwind !!)..get some speed..tilt the whole rig towards the back of the board...lift up in the forward footstrap and push the opposite way with the rear strap( almost as if you are trying to "twist the board via your feet"...this will drive the board upwind via the fin and the opposite rail of the board...remember SPEED is the key...dont panic about having to go across or downwind a bit to get planing..pick up speed quickly and then use the fin and rail to drive upwind...thats my 10 cents worth ...good luck
sboardcrazy
sboardcrazy
NSW
8333 posts
NSW, 8333 posts
7 Dec 2009 8:26am
Gestalt said...

i went in search of an experts opinion and found this from peter hart called the upwind challenge.

Sail Set
Avoid the extremes. If you bag the sail out too much in search of power it becomes inefficient. It can't exhaust, feels heavy in the hands and drives you sideways.
With too little outhaul, the sail goes back handed. You'll then direct the pressure into the back foot and risk overloading the fin.
Too much outhaul (and downhaul) and you pull the guts out of the sail, flatten the foil too much and end up going nowhere.

High boom.
Sailing upwind in moderate winds, your sheeting angle is closed - i.e. you'll be sheeted right in with the foot of the sail over the board's centre-line. If you have a low boom, under about shoulder height, your back-side will be skimming the waves. I can relate to that one..A higher boom leaves you in a more upright stance with your legs driving against the rails at a more efficient angle. Adjustable harness lines can also you're your cause especially on bigger free-ride kit. Racers tend to shorten their lines from about 30 down to or the upwind leg as it lifts their hips and makes the board sail more off the fin.

Fine size
The obvious way to help you sail upwind is to fit a bigger fin - but be cautious. Stay within the recommendations. The 133 Futura, for example, is designed to accommodate fins from about 40-50 cm. When you're setting out, you're often not making best use of the power and perhaps not sailing as fast and precisely as you should. The bigger fin will give you more lift and resistance at slow speeds. You can use a bit of back foot and lean on it when you're barely planing, and still get a positive reaction. It's your instant upwind companion. A possible down side is that a big fin can make you lazy and heavy footed. Ultimately a smaller fin will behave better in the manoeuvres AND drive you upwind just as well - you just have to sail faster.

TACTICS
You can improve your upwind performance tenfold just by being smarter. Tactics in this area is a massive subject but I'll limit myself to just 2 key tips.
1. Don't waste ground. Liken upwind sailing to rowing upstream on a river. Every time you lose concentration or stop to pick your nose, you lose ground.
The most popular mistake is to leave the beach off the plane and just drift off on a broad reach. Even without a daggerboard, it's possible to sail higher upwind off the plane than on the plane. Use the windward rail for extra resistance. Stand forward of the straps, press on the heels to sink it, steer upwind until you find that point where the board stops tracking and starts crabbing sideways. Having made ground upwind, you feel good about bearing away in the gusts to get planing.

2. Quick starts. Standing, lying, sitting in the water with your kit, in a force four you drift downwind ant about 1 kph = a slow walk. Now you may claim that you don't uphaul or waterstartt deliberately slowly and that if you could get going more quickly, you would but … actually a loit of peopke do waste a liot of time, cursing their luck/incompetence or floating around having a breather. A few points here:
1. The best to have a rest is in the shallows with your feet on the seabed.
2. The longer you hang arounbd before trying to recover the rig and waterstart, the harder it is as the rig has time to sink.

3. Clock the shifts. Spotting and reacting to changes in the wind direction sounds like the domain of the pro racer. In reality, at a basic level, it's quite easy and, at many locations, is officially the easiest way to make massive leaps upwind


Think my tactics are pretty good..must be from my sailing days..& here I was thinking I was too concerned about losing ground..?
ikw777
ikw777
QLD
2995 posts
QLD, 2995 posts
7 Dec 2009 9:57am


You don't need a big fin. Big lumps of sailors on little wave boards manage it nicely.




But it sure does help!
Gestalt
Gestalt
QLD
14953 posts
QLD, 14953 posts
7 Dec 2009 1:59pm
sbc, not ready to let it go yet so i have a couple more ideas.

othe than swinging your body forward, when sailing upwind you need to look upwind. that helps a lot. if you look to windward and will yourself to windward then your board will follow.

also had a thought about fin position.

when using a us box fin i have found that moving the fin forward in the box will reduce upwind ability (on my board) moving it back improves upwind ability.

also wondered when your sail is rigged, where is the batten above the boom in relation to your mast? is it touching the mast? not touching the mast? or sitting past the edge of the mast in line with the middle. (could just be a case of not enough shape in the sail)
also are you running a standard diameter mast?

also, with wave boards you need to use more front foot pressure than back foot pressure to go upwind. find some flat water and practice as in the chop it can be hard to find the right pressure for your board. once you get it though you will feel the board lift and accelerate to windward.

other thing about wave boards are they have lots of rocker which reduces upwind performance.

and just to confuse things further. when i am pinching hard on my wave board trying to get upwind i don't put my rear foot in the strap. i put it just behind my front foot. keeping my weight forward
NotWal
NotWal
QLD
7436 posts
QLD, 7436 posts
7 Dec 2009 2:37pm
ikw777 said...



You don't need a big fin. Big lumps of sailors on little wave boards manage it nicely.




But it sure does help!


agreed
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