Wind-Tunnel Investigation of the ILCA 7 Mk II Sail in Downwind Conditions
Paper in proceeding, 2023

Aerodynamic coefficients from wind-tunnel tests are presented for the ILCA 7 in all six degrees of freedom. Two apparent wind speeds are considered: a light wind case corresponding to 4 m/s at full scale and a strong wind case corresponding to 7 m/s. The light wind tests comprise five apparent wind angles, seven sheet angles, three kicker trims and three heel angles. For the strong wind case the dinghy is assumed sailing upright and only dead downwind, but with four sheet angles and three kicker trims. The scale is 1/7, which gives a reasonable blockage in the wind-tunnel. Blockage corrections are obtained using CFD. Correct scaling of the sail stretch, and mast bend is achieved with the full-scale sail cloth and a solid stainless-steel mast exposed to a wind speed √7 times larger than at full-scale. However, the Reynolds number is √7 times smaller. The main result of the investigation is the comprehensive data set, which is available on a public server. This data can be used in a VPP
to optimise downwind sailing in smooth water. Several interesting conclusions can also be drawn directly from the data. Thus, for the light wind case the best sheet angle is 90 degrees regardless of the course sailed. However, for the strong wind case (dead downwind), the best angle is 80 degrees. In all cases the tight kicker trim produces the largest drive force and in the light wind case also the smallest side force.

ILCA 7; Downwind Sailing; Wind Tunnel; Scaling; Blockage; Sail Coefficients.

Author

Gustaf Magnander

RISE Research Institutes of Sweden

Lars Larsson

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Marine Technology

Proceedings of 6th International Conference on Innovation in High Performance Sailing Yachts and Wind Assisted Ships

243-260

6th International Conference on Innovation in High Performance Sailing Yachts and Wind Assisted Ships
Lorient, France,

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Transport

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Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences

Astronomy, Astrophysics and Cosmology

Vehicle Engineering

Infrastructure

C3SE (Chalmers Centre for Computational Science and Engineering)

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Latest update

6/27/2023