Hi,
I've seen mention of boats with only stern plane control sticking their rears out of the water when diving steeply from the surface. Also I'm guessing there's a similar problem when skimming the bottom of a pool, where to come up by means of stern planes only, the rear is forced down and would hit the bottom.
It seems that if the bow planes were controllable, then both of these problems would be avoided, since you'd be lowering/lifting the bow instead of lifting/lowering the stern respectively in those two cases.
So, lacking an extra channel for separate bow plane control, how well would it work to control only the bow planes, and leave the stern planes fixed? I'm sure people have tried this - if it didn't work, why not?
Steve
I've seen mention of boats with only stern plane control sticking their rears out of the water when diving steeply from the surface. Also I'm guessing there's a similar problem when skimming the bottom of a pool, where to come up by means of stern planes only, the rear is forced down and would hit the bottom.
It seems that if the bow planes were controllable, then both of these problems would be avoided, since you'd be lowering/lifting the bow instead of lifting/lowering the stern respectively in those two cases.
So, lacking an extra channel for separate bow plane control, how well would it work to control only the bow planes, and leave the stern planes fixed? I'm sure people have tried this - if it didn't work, why not?
Steve
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