Here’s a stress analysis from one of Beebe’s books that should help calculating some loads.
I'd bet the spec on nylon is deliberate, to absorb shock loadings as much as possible and build in a bit of a spring.
Your reading seems correct. This notation seems consistent with my theory - the 3990 would be the max force from the fish.
A lot lower than the other numbers in earlier posts. Difference could have to do with steady-state vs shock loads.
For example, when I am lifting my flopper-stoppers out of the water and on to the boat I have to do it slowly as the downward force increases tremendously the faster I try to pull.
If you end up trying that, get this baby:Hmmm....if I had a 300 sq in fish and that crane scale KnotYet mentioned I could test this underway using our main mast boom.
Going down a rabbit hole this morning
= 128.49318134672 kilogram force
= 283.27897404848 pound force
Again, these are assumptions and I am by no means an aeronautical or marine engineer. I'm just trying to understand more about the actual forces on a 300 sq inch plywood wing dragged through seawater at 8 knots.
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Originally Posted by Xlantic View Post
A lot lower than the other numbers in earlier posts. Difference could have to do with steady-state vs shock loads.
For example, when I am lifting my flopper-stoppers out of the water and on to the boat I have to do it slowly as the downward force increases tremendously the faster I try to pull.
Yes, the lift calculations aren't the same as force required to overcome drag of the fish as the fish is pulled up or through (like a sea anchor) the water.
In response to your opening line, drag in a fluid increases to the square of speed.But surely the load would be no more than what it gets being dragged through water at the 8 knot calculated speed.????
I would think there would be a point where no more force could be made.
The only way to get more force/loading would be to increase the size of the fish
Or the density of the material it is being dragged through.
Add: But thinking further speed would effect it to a degree
Thinking along the lines of tie a boat to a dock and accelerate slowly to a set speed
Vs
Accelerate like a madman and hit the end of the rope - bang
But even on a roll, is it really going to be ripped/rolled through the water more than 8 knots?
And there is no sudden stop at the end.
And there is nylon or springs to take the hit.
That roll motion is magnified by the 20 ft or so of outrigger so perhaps 4x
faster than whatever roll you are experiencing at the helm or elsewhere
on the boat. The few knots of roll you feel produce large forces at the fish, as you can imagine.
Going a little further here. Assuming it's really "only" 283 pounds at the fish then calculating the ft-lbs (torque) at the center end of the lever (6 meters or 19 feet at center mast to the end of an extended pole) you get 5567 ft-lbs. So there would be 5567lbs of rotational force (in one direction) on the center of the rigging from one 300 sq in fish.
MoF = F * L
Where MoF is the moment of force (N*m)
F is the total force (N)
L is the total length (m)
Another factor that may have an effect is the acceleration and deceleration of the fish as they swing through the arc as the pole rises and falls. Also the speed of the fish is not static even if the boat speed is.. so I think the load changes there also.
I'm no ingineer but I stood next to one once!
Hollywood
Just as a reference point, the Seakeeper 3 produces about 7,800 n-m maximum rotational force. Not sure how that squares with your numbers, but that's probably somewhere close to properly designed paravanes for that boat.
300 pounds seems light as a max. We want the force required to get to stall.
The load on the fish is much smaller than the load on the hull connection points and mast rigging.
The force gets multiplied by the distance from the roll center.
A few hundred pounds on a 25' lever will produce a tremendous righting force.
Do you recall Archimedes' famous quote?
Very interesting. But I don't understand why Beebe would specify 4000 pounds or that line size if the fish gave up at 300 pounds. I get safety factors, but this doesn't quite fit my intuitive model.Interesting. 7800 n-m is 5752 ft-lbs so yeah, it's ballpark.
Going a little further here. Assuming it's really "only" 283 pounds at the fish then calculating the ft-lbs (torque) at the center end of the lever (6 meters or 19 feet at center mast to the end of an extended pole) you get 5567 ft-lbs. So there would be 5567lbs of rotational force (in one direction) on the center of the rigging from one 300 sq in fish.
Doesn't a lever require a fulcrum for your analogy to be correct? Without a fulcrum, I believe the load would be the same when measured at the fish or the attachment point.
Doesn't a lever require a fulcrum for your analogy to be correct? Without a fulcrum, I believe the load would be the same when measured at the fish or the attachment point.
Torque is defined as force at a distance, i.e, increase either one and youIt's what I was thinking
Load on rope is load on rope
It shouldn't increase because it's held outboard by a stick
There are at least 2 errors in my post above.In response to your opening line, drag in a fluid increases to the square of speed.
A fish that adds 50 lbs of load at 1 kt will add 500 lbs at 10 kts. The roll
motion being transmitted to the fish is in addition to the boat speed also already present.
That roll motion is magnified by the 20 ft or so of outrigger so perhaps 4x
faster than whatever roll you are experiencing at the helm or elsewhere
on the boat. The few knots of roll you feel produce large forces at the fish, as you can imagine.