Hydrodynamics of the Nautilus - some thoughts and observations

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  • captain nemo
    Junior Member
    • Mar 2003
    • 119

    #16
    Guys,

    My forward side rakers

    Guys,

    My forward side rakers are flat rather than upswept (a result of the poor quality plans I had available when I built the boat) but I think that supports my theory.

    Upswept rakers would induce a lifting moment to the bow, not a dive. In fact, I once thought the upswept bow and spur was to facilitate the ram penetrating a curved ship hull; but someone (Will or Harry?) told me the designer's real intent was to give the basic hull a built-in ascent characteristic that would bring her back to the surface in the event the dive planes failed.

    Looking at the camber, one might think the "lift" would be on the bottom side of the curve]http://www.subcommittee.com/forum/icon_wink.gif[/img]

    Pat

    Comment

    • carcharadon
      Junior Member
      • Feb 2003
      • 301

      #17
      While I don't claim to

      While I don't claim to be an expert, I have spent a lot of time at my "test pond". I've made three functional RC subs all working on the same principle of Jet propulsion. Those of you who have seen the videos will probably agree that I have a lot of "testing" experience. The first sub I made, a seven footer, I lost in my test pond in about 20 ft. of water. It was gone, sitting on the bottom. I was fortunately able to retrieve it. After that experience I was paranoid about losing a sub. To avoid this problem I made several design changes in the next seven footer. I installed a gas system, which worked great. I would purposely sink the sub in about 30 ft. of water. I would let it sit on the bottom for a while and then just pop it to the surface. This worked great until one day the hose filling the ascent bladder came off and all the gas just bubbled to surface. Well at least I was able to follow the trail of bubbles down to the sub and retrieve it. After that incident I said to heck with the gas system, it's back to dynamic diver. Another modification I made was to put a slight upsweep on the front rakers, as Pat mentions to achieve a slight upward direction when the sub is underwater. The 4 foot sub on the other hand has straight rakers. In either case the subs function the same. Once underwater they seem to level out and just go straight. I have found however that more important is the sitting orientation of the sub before moving or submerging. In the 7 ft. sub I can make a fine adjustment; if the tail is sitting very low, thereby pointing the nose up, where I can just barely get the sub to dive using the down control, the sub will eventually surface actually breaching out of the water. This looks real cool and about a third of the sub would come out of the water in about a 45 degree angle. I could never get a videotape of this however. Conversely if the tail is too high before the dive, it will eventually dive on a slight angle to the bottom. As a dynamic diver though all I would have to do is stop forward motion and the sub would come up. So based on my observations, orientation of the rakers may have an effect but at least in my subs the sitting orientation seems to be far more important.



      Edited By Carcharadon on 1086455756

      Comment

      • Guest

        #18
        Guys,

        My forward side rakers

        Guys,

        My forward side rakers are flat rather than upswept (a result of the poor quality plans I had available when I built the boat) but I think that supports my theory.

        Upswept rakers would induce a lifting moment to the bow, not a dive. In fact, I once thought the upswept bow and spur was to facilitate the ram penetrating a curved ship hull; but someone (Will or Harry?) told me the designer's real intent was to give the basic hull a built-in ascent characteristic that would bring her back to the surface in the event the dive planes failed.

        Looking at the camber, one might think the "lift" would be on the bottom side of the curve]http://www.subcommittee.com/forum/icon_wink.gif[/img]

        Pat
        I take it you have a cylindrical pressure hull in your Nautilus mini sub?

        After all that octagonal shape won't be anywhere near as good at withstanding hydrostatic pressure.....!

        Sounds like you're suggesting a larger cylinder as opposed to a weeny one and the use of bouyancy foam.

        The latter seems to be common practice in the US.

        In the UK most sub modellers prefer to build a larger cylinder to provide bouyancy.

        Only problem is larger cylinders require stronger material to withstand crush depth, innit!

        Plus you need a lot of lead to ballast the boat down to the waterline.

        No probs with a little boat, but with a biggun it's major pain the back...literally!

        Andy

        Comment

        • JWLaRue
          Managing Editor, SubCommittee Report
          • Aug 1994
          • 4281

          #19
          Interesting idea about the relative

          [color=#000000]Interesting idea about the relative sizes of the cylindrical WTC....

          Here's another data point]
          Rohr 1.....Los!

          Comment

          • bob the builder
            Former SC President
            • Feb 2003
            • 1367

            #20
            My Nautilus is dead level

            My Nautilus is dead level surfaced or submerged. I've measured accurately to within 1/8 of an inch in a testing tank.

            Not sure if that has anything to do with it, as she will pull downwards from full surfaced trim at full throttle, actually diving right up to the point where the prop breaks the surface and she loses speed.

            Whatever is pulling her down is below the level of the upper salon shroud (my fully, fully blown state).

            The only way that this will be answered properly is to build a model that is just the dodecahedron with no salon, rakers, keels, etc. Then add the detail pieces one at a time until the culprit is found.

            Looking again at the model, do you think it has anything to do with the break in the keel? There is a large flat area behind the forward section that will generate a lot of turbulence at speed (the area that houses the lower diving hatch)....
            The Nautilus Drydocks - Exceptional Products for the World of R/C Submarines - www.nautilusdrydocks.com

            Comment

            • wbnemo1
              Junior Member
              • Feb 2003
              • 37

              #21
              Howdy,
              the original intent of Harper

              Howdy,
              the original intent of Harper Goff Nautilus as he stated was to be simply this......."if for some reason the dive and trim planes failed to operate, the Nautilus would eventually surface under it's own power,this is why the upward sweep...something to that effect anyhoo!!!...Nautilus builders forget one thing it's not just the side rakers that have the approx3 degree upward sweep,it's the entire foward hull..my guess then is that either these R/C boats do not have this shape or that they aren't trimmed properly..Ray Mason sub is an example of what,if anything should be going on...his planes if going with speed lol
              William

              Comment

              • carcharadon
                Junior Member
                • Feb 2003
                • 301

                #22
                The three RC subs I

                The three RC subs I built each vary in design slightly, and size (7 ft., 4 ft.) . However, they run exactly as I had envisioned them. And they run great, no problems. But I have noted a slight, and I want to emphasize slight, tendency for the sub to want to dip its nose. This nose dip is related to speed. The faster the speed the greater the effect. At slow or moderate speed there is no effect. Also the larger the sub (greater mass) the less the effect.

                If you turn a Nautilus upside down and look at the hull sideways without the keels it looks to me like an inverted wing. I have an unfinished 7 ft. hull and if I could post a picture on this board I'd show it. There is a curved flat section on the bottom of the hull and as Andy and Jeff and others have suggested I think this results in a slight downward suction. (This seems intuitively obvious to me but it could be something else) On a larger sub, because of the greater mass and inertia involved, this effect is less prominent. I believe the stability in Pat’s Mini Sub is probably more related simply to its greater mass. (Pat what does your sub weigh?) Also in the case of Bob's sub I think the effect is accentuated because the CG of his Nautilus is very much forward, the combination of a forward CG and the downward effect I believe are accentuated in this case.

                Also a question for Pat and Will! The literature that came with the 50th anniversary Disney Nautilus says that the 11 footer was powered with five car batteries I believe. And weighed 1000 lbs. I assume that that the 11 footer was a functional model? I wonder how it was controlled? Was it remotely controlled somehow? Any more information on the 11 footer?




                Edited By Carcharadon on 1086529236

                Comment

                • wbnemo1
                  Junior Member
                  • Feb 2003
                  • 37

                  #23
                  Those batteries were used to

                  [color=#000000]Those batteries were used to work the lights, propeller,and spiral speed indicator,perhaps the dive planes,not sure on those though...
                  William aka z(]

                  Comment

                  • Guest

                    #24
                    Anyone know the speed that

                    Anyone know the speed that the Nautilus 'sled' used for the surface running scenes, was winched through the water?

                    Andy

                    Comment

                    • carcharadon
                      Junior Member
                      • Feb 2003
                      • 301

                      #25
                      I was able to post

                      I was able to post a picture of two unfinished Nautilus hulls upside down showing the curvature in profile. The hulls are unfinished models of a 7 ft. and 4 ft. The picture illustrates how much the bottom hull resembles the cross-section of an aircraft wing. Now making some broad assumptions here that hydrodynamics and aerodynamics are somewhat similar except of course for density it is reasonable to intuitively assume that the bottom hull shape of the Nautilus can, to some degree act as a inverted airplane wing providing a slight downward thrust (or suction) in relation to increased speed. This seems to make sense to me. However, I could be entirely wrong in this.





                      Andy I think they mention something about the 22 ft. model being towed by a truck on the 20K DVD. I think scale wise it was in excess of 300 mph. I could be wrong I'll see if I can find it again.

                      Comment

                      • Guest

                        #26
                        I was able to post

                        I was able to post a picture of two unfinished Nautilus hulls upside down showing the curvature in profile. The hulls are unfinished models of a 7 ft. and 4 ft. The picture illustrates how much the bottom hull resembles the cross-section of an aircraft wing. Now making some broad assumptions here that hydrodynamics and aerodynamics are somewhat similar except of course for density it is reasonable to intuitively assume that the bottom hull shape of the Nautilus can, to some degree act as a inverted airplane wing providing a slight downward thrust (or suction) in relation to increased speed. This seems to make sense to me. However, I could be entirely wrong in this.





                        Andy I think they mention something about the 22 ft. model being towed by a truck on the 20K DVD. I think scale wise it was in excess of 300 mph. I could be wrong I'll see if I can find it again.
                        That can't be right!

                        The truck would have had to have been travelling at appoximately 190mph!

                        My method for calculating scale speed, taken from 'Model Submarine technology'-

                        (Original speed/square root of model scale) x 1.75 (model factor)

                        Therefore

                        (300/2. x 1.75= 187.5 mph

                        Some truck!

                        Andy

                        Comment

                        • carcharadon
                          Junior Member
                          • Feb 2003
                          • 301

                          #27
                          Whatever scale speed they said

                          Whatever scale speed they said it was they also said it was excessive, but the director said he liked the effect anyway and he said to go with it. I think its on the DVD in the bonus material some place. I looked but couldn't find it.


                          177ft/300mph = 22ft/37mph




                          Edited By Carcharadon on 1086622321

                          Comment

                          • bob the builder
                            Former SC President
                            • Feb 2003
                            • 1367

                            #28
                            Howdy,
                            the original intent of Harper

                            Howdy,
                            the original intent of Harper Goff Nautilus as he stated was to be simply this......."if for some reason the dive and trim planes failed to operate, the Nautilus would eventually surface under it's own power,this is why the upward sweep...something to that effect anyhoo!!!...Nautilus builders forget one thing it's not just the side rakers that have the approx3 degree upward sweep,it's the entire foward hull..my guess then is that either these R/C boats do not have this shape or that they aren't trimmed properly..Ray Mason sub is an example of what,if anything should be going on...his planes if going with speed lol
                            William
                            Will,


                            I'm quite insulted that you're calling my model "improperly trimmed"! And then you say it doesn't have the proper shape on top of it all!

                            Take thy dagger from my heart!

                            Actually, as far as I can tell, the only difference between my model and the corrected plans of yours is a slight difference in the 40' bulkhead. Mine is just slightly larger than your plans call for, but not to any huge degree. I think maybe something like 1/8" in 1/32 scale.

                            My bulkheads do follow the correct upward slanting design that we're talking about, and I do realize that it's the whole front end and not just the rakers that rise. That statement was not properly clarified on my part.

                            And in terms of trim... my model is the most gentle thing to operate in an RC sub that you could hope for. We recently had a fun run up here where about eight representatives from BC and Washington showed up. All of them remarked at how well my Nautilus performed, how steady she was, and what a dream to drive she was. These statements were not said with a "for a Nautilus" in there anywhere, but for ANY RC sub.

                            My statements about her tendency to dive may be taken a bit out of context here. I rather like this quirk of the model and I'm not complaining to any degree. If I were a "Nautilus Nazi (yuk yuk yuk), I'd forgo the aft planes and just let her dive on her own without ANY input from the planes.

                            I find it interesting that I've talked with four owners of RC Nautili (Nautiloi?) and they all say that their models have the same dive characteristics as mine. That's a bit of a stretch to say that all four models have the incorrect shape and trim, don't you think?

                            You just don't like me adding those planes, do you Will?

                            There.

                            I'm done ranting.

                            Nobody likes me. I'm going to go cry in my pillow for a while.




                            Edited By Bob the Builder on 1086623017
                            The Nautilus Drydocks - Exceptional Products for the World of R/C Submarines - www.nautilusdrydocks.com

                            Comment

                            • carcharadon
                              Junior Member
                              • Feb 2003
                              • 301

                              #29
                              Bob, I remember an old

                              Bob, I remember an old adage I heard in school way back. Probably in an art history course. However it had to do with form and function. Looking at the Nautilus this is tough submarine to replicate in terms of form but also in terms of function. But I must say that your submarine is probably the best marriage of form and function for this sub. At least on an RC level. With all due respect to everyone else.

                              Comment

                              • Guest

                                #30
                                Whatever scale speed they said

                                Whatever scale speed they said it was they also said it was excessive, but the director said he liked the effect anyway and he said to go with it. I think its on the DVD in the bonus material some place. I looked but couldn't find it.


                                177ft/300mph = 22ft/37mph
                                [color=#000000]177ft/60 mph = 22ft/37mph, roughly.

                                So, according to my calculations, a 1/32nd scale Nautilus will need to cut through the wet stuff at about 18.5 mph to emulate the wave formation from the movie.

                                That's a fair old clip.

                                ]

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