nicholashansen
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2015
- Messages
- 126
Hello,
I had a few questions that I was hoping to have some more experienced racers to hopefully shed some light on, as this topic has been a little bewildering when I attempted to do some research on it. Id like to note that this is more in regards to modern rear winged, turbine hulls, basically in the last 25 years or so.
From all the galleries and pictures of scale builds ive tried to accumulate, the more important ones ive sought out are of the bottom sides of hulls, as I enjoy seeing the variations between different designers hulls. However after doing my recent modifications to the sponsons and rear shoes on my U-88, ive come to wonder if I had the correct approach....I notice alot of guys tend to add depth to the rear shoes on their hulls, with 1/4" being a common addition on alot of glass hulls ive seen. Now I know that in the straights, the prop is supposed to be providing the lift and ideally, the rear shoes should not be in the water. With this in mind, I imagine that in theory, adding this depth to the rear shoes would in turn allow the rear of the boat to float a bit higher so that it can more easily support better straightaway performance, correct? But if this is so, it confuses me in the sense that all sponson modifications that I see usually consist of the backend of the ride surfaces being deepened as well, and thus a higher angle of attack. Wouldnt this then obviously raise the front of the boat more and make it more difficult for the rear shoes to stay out of the water? or is it basically just as simple as having the rear shoes set at a higher "ratio" of depth relative to the sponsons?
Also, for the more modern hulls, specifically since the T6 and on, the rear shoes are offset in how far they extend from the transom. With my U-88, I noticed this is especially true. For my recent modifications, to generalize, I added the same amount of depth to each sponson and rear shoe, and ive blueprinted the bottom so that when the hull is set on a perfectly level surface, each shoe and sponson is equally resting on the floor. Is this how it should be? I assume that all 4 points coming to rest equally on a level surface is more dependent on a side-to-side skew, rather than front to back, so if I were to add equal depth to both rear shoes now, the hull will remain equally blueprinted right?
I had a few questions that I was hoping to have some more experienced racers to hopefully shed some light on, as this topic has been a little bewildering when I attempted to do some research on it. Id like to note that this is more in regards to modern rear winged, turbine hulls, basically in the last 25 years or so.
From all the galleries and pictures of scale builds ive tried to accumulate, the more important ones ive sought out are of the bottom sides of hulls, as I enjoy seeing the variations between different designers hulls. However after doing my recent modifications to the sponsons and rear shoes on my U-88, ive come to wonder if I had the correct approach....I notice alot of guys tend to add depth to the rear shoes on their hulls, with 1/4" being a common addition on alot of glass hulls ive seen. Now I know that in the straights, the prop is supposed to be providing the lift and ideally, the rear shoes should not be in the water. With this in mind, I imagine that in theory, adding this depth to the rear shoes would in turn allow the rear of the boat to float a bit higher so that it can more easily support better straightaway performance, correct? But if this is so, it confuses me in the sense that all sponson modifications that I see usually consist of the backend of the ride surfaces being deepened as well, and thus a higher angle of attack. Wouldnt this then obviously raise the front of the boat more and make it more difficult for the rear shoes to stay out of the water? or is it basically just as simple as having the rear shoes set at a higher "ratio" of depth relative to the sponsons?
Also, for the more modern hulls, specifically since the T6 and on, the rear shoes are offset in how far they extend from the transom. With my U-88, I noticed this is especially true. For my recent modifications, to generalize, I added the same amount of depth to each sponson and rear shoe, and ive blueprinted the bottom so that when the hull is set on a perfectly level surface, each shoe and sponson is equally resting on the floor. Is this how it should be? I assume that all 4 points coming to rest equally on a level surface is more dependent on a side-to-side skew, rather than front to back, so if I were to add equal depth to both rear shoes now, the hull will remain equally blueprinted right?