Difference between revisions of "UFO"
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− | The MIT Sailing Pavilion has a UFO sailboat that uses wing-like T foils to lift the hull out of the water. This 8 foot 9 inch, 110 pound catamaran style dinghy "flies" above the water is a good introduction to foiling. | + | The MIT Sailing Pavilion has a UFO sailboat that uses wing-like T foils to lift the hull out of the water. This 8 foot 9 inch, 110 pound catamaran style dinghy "flies" above the water is a good introduction to foiling. It is stable at low speeds and is difficult to capsize in displacement mode. |
==Requirements to Sail== | ==Requirements to Sail== | ||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
==Rigging the UFO== | ==Rigging the UFO== | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Bottom of sail goes on first | ||
+ | *Might need 2 people to raise sail (1 pulls halyard back/down, 1 helps feed in sail) | ||
+ | *Put on cunningham before outhaul | ||
+ | *Don’t forget bottom batten | ||
+ | **Should be tied to cunningham finetune | ||
+ | *Latches for front foil are loose, make sure to tighten all the way | ||
+ | *Check for water | ||
==Derigging Notes== | ==Derigging Notes== | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Raise front foil in the water, then pull boat onto the dock to raise the back foil | ||
+ | **Careful not to hit rudder/foil against dock, but this makes it x10000 easier | ||
+ | *Remove bottom of sail first, roll as you bring down | ||
+ | **Since top batten is at a different angle from rest, reroll from the top so that this batten is aligned with the others afterwards | ||
+ | *Tie bottom batten to cunningham finetune | ||
+ | *Halyard gets tied to back of boom and cunningham | ||
+ | **Raise boom to decrease stress on spreaders | ||
+ | *Check for water | ||
==Sailing Basics== | ==Sailing Basics== | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Jibes are much much easier/faster than tacks | ||
+ | *Backwind sail to get moving | ||
+ | **Stand up, push boom away, point tiller away (controls flip when backwinding) | ||
+ | **Then sit, sheet in, head down for speed | ||
+ | *Windward heel and weight back/out helps get you foiling | ||
+ | *Heading up/trimming powers up, heading down/easing powers down | ||
+ | *Can’t hike the boat flat once you’re on foils, use angle and trim to control | ||
+ | *https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_F8doHBpkRw&frags=pl%2Cwn | ||
==Tuning Basics== | ==Tuning Basics== | ||
Righty flighty, lefty loosey | Righty flighty, lefty loosey |
Latest revision as of 11:19, 2 September 2018
The MIT Sailing Pavilion has a UFO sailboat that uses wing-like T foils to lift the hull out of the water. This 8 foot 9 inch, 110 pound catamaran style dinghy "flies" above the water is a good introduction to foiling. It is stable at low speeds and is difficult to capsize in displacement mode.
Contents
Requirements to Sail
- Must have full membership (Normal Sailing Card)
- Must have sufficient ratings; either
- Helmsman rating OR
- Provisional rating and at least two of the three high(er) performance boat ratings
- 420
- Firefly
- Laser
- Must take class to learn to rig/ sail
Safety For You (& The Boat)
Rigging the UFO
- Bottom of sail goes on first
- Might need 2 people to raise sail (1 pulls halyard back/down, 1 helps feed in sail)
- Put on cunningham before outhaul
- Don’t forget bottom batten
- Should be tied to cunningham finetune
- Latches for front foil are loose, make sure to tighten all the way
- Check for water
Derigging Notes
- Raise front foil in the water, then pull boat onto the dock to raise the back foil
- Careful not to hit rudder/foil against dock, but this makes it x10000 easier
- Remove bottom of sail first, roll as you bring down
- Since top batten is at a different angle from rest, reroll from the top so that this batten is aligned with the others afterwards
- Tie bottom batten to cunningham finetune
- Halyard gets tied to back of boom and cunningham
- Raise boom to decrease stress on spreaders
- Check for water
Sailing Basics
- Jibes are much much easier/faster than tacks
- Backwind sail to get moving
- Stand up, push boom away, point tiller away (controls flip when backwinding)
- Then sit, sheet in, head down for speed
- Windward heel and weight back/out helps get you foiling
- Heading up/trimming powers up, heading down/easing powers down
- Can’t hike the boat flat once you’re on foils, use angle and trim to control
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_F8doHBpkRw&frags=pl%2Cwn
Tuning Basics
Righty flighty, lefty loosey