Took forever but suddenly got delivery of a new thermocouple, controller and what the postie claimed was some gold bars. Turns out the postie doesn't understand the difference in density between gold and Al (7.1x) but some nice 7075 and 6061 billets arrived instead. Will turn these into a FF22 and FF21 respectively (the choice made by available material thickness from supplier...Aussie for those that care), possibly make them without a normal mount to save weight (3d print instead), anodise and see if better than the 5083. Ran a quick test and the new thermocouple read 50-60degC higher than the old which may explain why the first fin melted. Did various combos of switching thermo positions, changing controller to each thermocouple and then sent a query to supplier as seems first thermo couple reads much lower than second when in theory they should read within a few deg. Need to decide whether to trust the 2nd thermo reading and go ahead, get a third sensor or wait for supplier. Current plan is wait. re the thermocouple positions, they are on the back wall. First one is exactly mid height and the second is midway between the original and the top of element. (The attached pic is a bit dodgy as was 500degC when I took it and I left the melted FF18 in as a back up temperature indicator). The longer thermocouple is the 'new' one as I cut the old one back a little (this perhaps is the reason for difference?). One would think the upper sensor would read higher as close to the element but the 'old' thermocouple reads same as 'new' when placed near the element on heating then diverges lower when off. Certainly appears I cooked the first fin at least 50degC hotter than planned. Ultimately need two sensors reading the same to be confident of the temp
I reckon the pizzas will be awesome
Yep. I'll put my order in now for November Hot n spicy please
Time for another experiment - the FF18bulb. I was looking at different methods to interrupt the tip vortex and reduce drag. After a bit of mucking about I settled on a bulb. This is the mock up - thanks to Flex for the sceenshot.
I got it cast up and modified the bulb by making it a blunt beaver tail with a relatively flat lower surface similar to the keel bulb on Wild Oats XI. The reason for the mods was to make it safe and to provide a large flat surface to skid across soft mud rather than dig in. The lower surface also acts like a ski and provides a little vertical lift. The bulb has no keel weight righting moment purpose whatsoever. (It doesn't have vertical stabilisers like the Wild Oats version below.)
The bulb was placed on a FF18 V4 so I could directly compare the performance with and without the bulb. After some fine-tuning and even more mistakes, the results are getting clearer.
The FF18V4 is a fine foil with low drag, low lift and susceptible to spin out compared to its older siblings. The FF18bulb version has much greater resistance to spin out and some improvement in lateral lift. Possibly it's a little draggier in the weed, but I am not sure about this as both go through heavy weed without a fuss. Neither is good in chop, but the bulb is the better of the two.
The big difference is the performance once into the 30 knots range. The bulb starts contributing noticeable vertical lift. The tail on my heavy Xantos 310 gets 'hard' under foot and the board trims flatter and rides a little higher. The board drag is reduced to such an extent that 30 year old plastic wrapped board has passed the 35 knot mark!
The next step is to use the fin on a smaller board and see if I can find the point where the vertical lift becomes too much and makes the board unstable, or the induced drag from the bulb is greater than the board drag.
Definitely worth exploring the possibilities, I would think a bulbed fin could be a size smaller than a classic one ?
It would be great if you could send one to Lake George for volunteers to test it
Definitely worth exploring the possibilities, I would think a bulbed fin could be a size smaller than a classic one ?
It would be great if you could send one to Lake George for volunteers to test it
Agree, I'm thinking design efficiencies might mean a smaller fin and less overall drag.
Definitely worth exploring the possibilities, I would think a bulbed fin could be a size smaller than a classic one ?
It would be great if you could send one to Lake George for volunteers to test it
Not in time for this season p'sloshin. . I am still very much in the infancy phase with this thought bubble. My next version will be to marry the bulb with a cut-down FF22 or something with a more powerful lateral lift component than the skinny FF18's family. Atm the FF18bulb is good through heavy weed and an interesting experience at higher speed at low AoA downhill. The bulb seems to make an underwhelming feeling fin better, but as an all-round experience, it is not nearly as accomplished as any of the classic FF family.
Top view with flattened/ beaver tail.
The underside of the 'skid' showing a bit of wear and tear from testing on the real estate.
Not really a true Fangy fin but certainly inspired and loosely based on one. This is a 3D printed version that doesn't have a flange (no need for a gasket) and is stretched to lower the draft to 16cm. Came up with the build technique playing around with Annular fin designs and seems a cheap and quick way to make and test concept fins before committing to more expensive build techniques (cast, CNC, fibre glass, carbon etc). Works on the principle of keeping the 3D print in compression and is just a laminate of 3D print over a 1.5mm sheet stainless core covered by one layer of glass (mainly to stop bits falling off and polluting the place). This particular fin worked way better than expected on big board with big sail on low wind day. Downside was it flexed too much so had to point board correspondingly further upwind but still could head upwind just fine. Could not make it spin out until took into reasonable chop. Felt fast for such a low wind day so will be interesting to test in higher winds. Maybe its flexibility was why it didn't spin out? Seems good enough fin to add a few more layers of glass to stiffen or machine one up... Video of how it was built and first test here for those interested
And we all love a bit of alliteration too. I am going to spend the windless days coming up to watch fin cam in much greater detail.
Just a little excursion on cut outs. The donor was a post-anodising munted FF24. In my hands, the fin below is almost spin out proof and a confidence inspiring bit of kit when pushing onto choppier water. Fab on reaches and bear-aways in less than perfect conditions on shallow/weedy runs.
Before you get excited with an angle grinder, the downsides I have noticed so far are:
- A distinct loss of max lift. The ventilation pathway is gone, but at the expense of leakage from the high to low pressure sides of the fin.
- A distinct loss of low end lift, for the same reason above, which manifests as bugger all drive out from a gybe if the speed drops too low.
I haven't figured out if there is a overall drag penalty yet. I think there is a reduction in the lift versus drag ratio because the lift is noticeably less. At higher speeds where the viscous effects of the water are less important, I am guessing things might not be so clear cut. For now, much more experimenting to do...
Reasons for doing this to a fin would be limited and I reckon there would be better fin options to explore first.
It's an interesting idea that I put in my fins when I unashamedly copied your idea . I don't have weed but it is shallow at times . So I made more upright versions with a bigger cutout . I use it with big gear . I don't have a non cut out version to compare with . When they let go , they only slightly drift and pull back quickly . It's a strange feeling that lets you push the fin without danger . Is that what your feeling ? I'm sure it's got to do with the cutout . Makes me wonder if a normal upright fin would benefit from a cutout ?
If they could make it strong enough to do so ?
I like a 55 cm pointer in 15 kts on big gear , it's like riding with suspension.
Makes me wonder if a normal upright fin would benefit from a cutout ?
Never seen one of that type of fin. I thought they were something to do with unicorns, mermaids, or Walt Disney
Yes the initial spin out motion is interesting, you think it's about to let go, slides a smidge and then comes back into line. I thought it was just my awesome cat like reflexes, but if it's happened to you too, I guess it must be the fin cutout then.
The pressure leakage over the total area of a long fin I would guess would be proportionally less and therefore the fin could benefit. The fact that it isn't done a lot commercially makes me think there is not enough benefit and/or, as you say, structurally too hard. (Apart from Wolfgang Lessacher's stuff of course)
Makes me wonder if a normal upright fin would benefit from a cutout ?
Never seen one of that type of fin. I thought they were something to do with unicorns, mermaids, or Walt Disney
Yes the initial spin out motion is interesting, you think it's about to let go, slides a smidge and then comes back into line. I thought it was just my awesome cat like reflexes, but if it's happened to you too, I guess it must be the fin cutout then.
The pressure leakage over the total area of a long fin I would guess would be proportionally less and therefore the fin could benefit. The fact that it isn't done a lot commercially makes me think there is not enough benefit and/or, as you say, structurally too hard. (Apart from Wolfgang Lessacher's stuff of course)
Are you saying I don't have cat like reflexes ? Cos I do , more like ninja cat reflexes . If you were to lube up my belly with a block of butter I could slide for 10 , maybe 15 , metres on slick tiles . And make no noise .
Fangman, that fin looks suspiciously the same as the fin you donated to the weird science cooking experiment quite a few moons ago. The good news is I ground all that goo you had on it and looks like can salvage the fin. The bad news is 6 months after melting the previous fin I am still struggling to get two thermocouples to read roughly the same to be relatively sure of the temperature before cooking this bad boy. Two dodgy ebayers, three thermo couples and two controllers later one would think some combo would read roughly the same but at temp I still get 80degC+ or so separation. Initially I thought the issue was temp distribution in the furnace (i.e. much hotter at top) and seems adding a ventilation system is usual way of equalising this out so made one up using a junk vacuum cleaner motor. Helped a little (enough to give the illusion I was on the right track) so took Imax's advice and turned it on the side to make a pizza oven and thus reduce the potential temperature gradient.
Oven definitely now awesome for Pizza but didn't do bugger all for the temp difference issue so back to thermocouples or controllers. Saw your post, so bit the bullet today and ordered another controller and thermocouple. The hope is two out of 4 will read similar. Once arrive, will cook this fin regardless based on the highest temp reading I get. The point of this heat treatment exercise is to get rid of that porosity you can see on the thick bit of all Fangy fins. 90% sure that is caused by slow cooling of the thick bits in casting process. Will do absolutely nothing for performance of fin but may make aesthetically better so can polish up the middle and make anodising the fin much more uniform.
Seems I can keep my actual pizza oven at 540degC much easier than all this effort by fiddling with logs, air etc but figured this approach was better long term solution...definitely on the way to being wrong here...will see
Oh bloody Nora! That's where that fin went! I turned the shed upside down looking for it - on the plus side I found all sorts of excellent stuff I had forgotten I had
Oh bloody Nora! That's where that fin went! I turned the shed upside down looking for it - on the plus side I found all sorts of excellent stuff I had forgotten I had
LOL!! . I regularly find 'useful and interesting stuff' in my shed that I had forgotten about when I am looking for other stuff. It's a phenomenon that probably needs it own name! ........ or is it more a a old age 'condition'???
Makes me wonder if a normal upright fin would benefit from a cutout ?
Never seen one of that type of fin. I thought they were something to do with unicorns, mermaids, or Walt Disney
Yes the initial spin out motion is interesting, you think it's about to let go, slides a smidge and then comes back into line. I thought it was just my awesome cat like reflexes, but if it's happened to you too, I guess it must be the fin cutout then.
The pressure leakage over the total area of a long fin I would guess would be proportionally less and therefore the fin could benefit. The fact that it isn't done a lot commercially makes me think there is not enough benefit and/or, as you say, structurally too hard. (Apart from Wolfgang Lessacher's stuff of course)
Are you saying I don't have cat like reflexes ? Cos I do , more like ninja cat reflexes . If you were to lube up my belly with a block of butter I could slide for 10 , maybe 15 , metres on slick tiles . And make no noise .
Video or it didnt happen !
Just in case you have missed Flex's amazingly good video. The usual excellent production, but also so much good nerdy stuff in here!
Top view with flattened/ beaver tail.
The underside of the 'skid' showing a bit of wear and tear from testing on the real estate.
That looks very nice Ross!!!
Top view with flattened/ beaver tail.
That looks very nice Ross!!!
Still a work in progress, Marty. I am trying to figure out at what speed the extra fin drag outweighs the decreased board drag. At this point, all I have is that this fin was the first to get my old plastic Xantos 310 over the 35 knot mark repeatedly. I would say that if you have a fin that is an average performer in the lift stakes, this is a good idea. (Up to the 35 knots mark at least). I have been working on learning and implementing CFD analysis. I am frustratingly close to getting it all to work, but each time little technical hiccups keep causing mischief and I spit the dummy and go and sulk for a few weeks.
A sneak peek at what the next gen FF might look like. Once again all thanks to Flex, who cannot stand an idle 3D printer, the virtual prototype was married to Flex's transfer plates and tuttle box. The trailing edge ellipsoid is a result of a porridge of ideas and thought bubbles around spin out mitigation and drag reduction. The momentum of surface layer of water is kept higher in the region of most likely ventilation and there is a nod to Whitcomb's Area rule to reduce drag, along with a blend of NASA foil profiles at various stations along the wingspan.
It could all be complete bollocks, but I am closing in on a 3D higher resolution mesh CFD analysis that hopefully will tell the tale. In the meantime, Nefario Flex will weave his usual inspirational outside the box stuff and probably have this print on the water. No doubt there will be a fab little video detailing its fate...
Fangy is correct that I have had this fin on the water (twice now) and there is a video but he is incorrect regarding its fate as it (and pilot) is still in one piece.
Was going to hand this to Fangy to build and test but he informed me it was just a dummy to test whether I could read his design files ok to import into Fusion 360 in order to turn it into something you can build. He never meant for me to print it but since I had printed it I finished it anyway and took it for a spin at Australind. It was fairly choppy and unfortunately I hadn't been out on the small gear for a long time so stopped after one run to adjust harness lines. Whilst doing this I managed to snag the boom on the fincam which misaligned its view screen into the water flow. This created lots of drag and deteriorated the fin cam image so didn't really see how fast this thing can go. As the session went on this drag got greater and greater.
The fin seemed rock solid at speed in chop but for me the highlight was the build technique was fast/cheap and worked. The fin (other than the very tip) was super stiff. I was planning on putting a layer of glass or carbon fibre over it to increase the tip longevity but tried it without first.
Hopefully it is clear from video how it is built but essentially the 3D print has gyroid infill which means all the pore space can be filled with epoxy. This fin was made with 15% infill (so approximately 85% epoxy). Whilst the tea test showed fluid could get everywhere the epoxy had a few air bubbles so next fin I will vacuum bag in order to get rid of these bubbles.
If Fangman gives his blessing I will share the design so others can have a go if they want.
Video below
yeah Flexafario! Fab to see it wasn't an uncontrolled 'fission' reaction on its first outing. How cool is the freeze frame of the spinout flow!?. Is the back end of the ellipsoid tucked up too far under the board for the camera to get a glimpse? (I am not suggesting you drill more holes in your camera board for viewports)
yeah Flexafario! Fab to see it wasn't an uncontrolled 'fission' reaction on its first outing. How cool is the freeze frame of the spinout flow!?. Is the back end of the ellipsoid tucked up too far under the board for the camera to get a glimpse? (I am not suggesting you drill more holes in your camera board for viewports)
ya, even the super wide FOV on the Gopro can't see the ellipsoid with this fin cam (view angle is roughly is 45 deg forwards from tail of board. The big board fin cams could probably see it as they are imbedded into the tail and underside. Didn't think this tiny fin would work on the big 111 iSonic though.
That spin out shot , showing lots of air . I've always imagined a huge amount of air to spin out . It would be interesting to actually know where the air comes from . That way we could counteract it. Do we know if the huge amount of air sucks from the front , side or rear of the fin / board ?
Im sure flex could build a glass bottom , rear third of a board with a camera pointing down above the fin.
That would give information on where the air comes from.
Its strange that we can get complete air under the board with no problems, and then it does it's funky spin out thing on solid water.