Thanks Howard for weighing in on this topic.
I have a 1987 manual and they say you need 300 lbs for the Hobie 16. I was really hoping you were right about 230.
rattle 'n hum wrote:
Alfred: Forget wracking your brain with the physics and take my word that it has been empirically proven that 200 lbs. on a pole is not enough to right your boat in all conditions.
That is what I am seeking, empirical proof of what it would take, to see if there is a practical solution.
cray fish wrote:
Please, build a few poles and try them out. Let us know the empirical results of your endeavors. Post photographs!
Crayfish- Thanks for the encouragement. I have been relearning the physics of torque and have emailed to local physic teachers to see if they will help me with the calculation.
srm wrote:
The location where you hold the rope has zero bearing on how much torque you transmit to the boat. It only effects how comfortable it is hold onto the righting line. All the boat cares about is the horizontal distance of your center of mass from the lower hull (fulcrum). There is no way to get around this. The physics is what it is. You either have to move out farther or add more weight. sm
Here is what I think I understand so far. The lower hull or pylon is the fulcrum point. The frame to upper hull is the moment arm.
Torque is generated at 90 degrees to the direction to of the force. 100 lbs applied perpendicularily on 10' moment arm generates 1000ft/lbs of torque. If they angle of force changes from 90 to 37 degrees the resulting torque is only 600 lbs. see this site for full details:
http://physics.uwstout.edu/statstr/stat ... tat131.htm
This means that 300 lbs hanging down & out on a righting line(s) is not generating its full potential of force.
This is all I am sure of so far. I still have questions about calculating the torque that the 300 lbs on righting lines is actually generating, so I stopping here until I get more info. Once I understand how to calculate this (I have the forumulas, but I am not sure what the effective length of the moment arm is), I can then figure where you'd have to place 200 lbs to equal it.
It still may end up too far out to be practical.