quote:
Originally posted by slowboat
I dont recommend touching any well foiled fin (such as a techtonics, or deboichet) unless there is something specifically wrong with it.
... unless you like being a teller machine... :-)
Mathew, what were you studying to be looking at laminar flow and tank tests? Do you agree about the reason for 600 grit being a good thing? I havent found too many people interested in the topic, and nobody I've spoken to in the industry has given me a plausible answer. "It just goes better" is the most useful so far!
I did engineering (electrical) at Uni where we did a semester of fluid dynamics (which really did my head in...). Before that I did some personal research on fluid flows. I cant remember what the names of the various footage was... But it is interesting to see a foil that is 10x as thick as a circular item (looking top-down), producing less drag at a given fluid speed.
The 600-grit thing has always a "yeah whatever..." thing... The local hardware store stock 400 and 800 -> 400 seems a little rough... so I tend to use 800 on the final finish. But I'm definately no expert - I do however sand the my fins whenever they touch sand/rock, as you can really feel a fin that hits its wall when it contains nicks/scratches. Some people even recommend making sure that all the scratch-lines flow front-to-back (what the?)...
That said, the only real fin-design solution that would be applicable to windsurfing it that if we CNC'd 50 fins, then altered each one slightly differently, then placed them in a tank. **
** In recent years CFD software has come a long way - it may be possible to do "practial" CFD analysis..
So: why isnt the back 1/3 of the fin dimpled like a golf ball?
The idea is that we could then get a idea on how surface roughness fares wrt. speed.
In any case, the main reason for an ultra-slick finish is that (in most scenarios) it there is less surface drag, ie: lets say a smooth surface produces a bouldry layouer of .1mm, a rough finish may have a boundry layer of .5mm -> the thicker boundry layer, the more surface-drag.
However, the thicker boundry layer may have more resistance from air bubles touching the fin surface, and less prone to stall.