First sail at speed
Yesterday saw the first wind at Canyon Ferry, in the 2 weeks that I have been here. As a trough moved through the area, the winds picked up at about midday, to 15 mph, then steadily grew, peaking at around 30 mph by 17:00.
I got the Greenbird ready, tested the parachute deployment, strapped in the GPS and camera equipment (2 mini HD cams, one pointing forwards, the other backwards) and set off.
For all of these tests, you must remember it is essentially the same machine that I ran on land, both on tarmac in the UK and dirt in Nevada, so we have good performance figures to compare against. The initial acceleration was impressive and better than on land, reaching 40 mph without me even touching the sail controls. From then on a slight pumping of the wing sheeting pressure system pulled in the wing and we were off. But it very quickly became apparent, that the ice is just way too rough, despite my optimistic idea that we had enough room, it was not the case.
After a few slow circuits I was confident everything was working so pushed a little harder, peaking at 73 mph, but the ride was nothing short of ‘brutal’. Even with the ‘plank’ flexing nicely, hitting a 3inch ice bump at 70 mph in a yacht weighing 850kg, is a rough experience. The yacht bounces around, skips sideways very slightly while it regains its ‘edge’ then off again, pretty wild accelerations in all directions. Shakes the boat to pieces and is definitely not ‘fast’. The problem is that with these bumps every 30 feet, there is no let up. The further offshore you go the worse the bumps (actually old snow drifts) get, so I was confined to a narrow strip at the edge of the lake. However, even in these rough conditions, the Greenbird handled very well, good control of direction and power, no failures, which is a testament to the structure and overall strength.
This picture of my track, overlayed on the lake surface shows how little room we have to play with.
It was so rough, that BOTH onboard cameras malfunctioned, capturing only the first few seconds of each trip. This was a real shame because it was a pretty spectacular ride from the cockpit.
I was initially disappointed with the speed, as the yacht has gone a lot faster on land, but once the wind and GPS data was downloaded, I began to understand the numbers. Due to the confined space, I could only sail at close angles to the wind (into or away from it) and not perpendicular, which is fastest. The wind was coming from the prevailing direction at 320 deg. The fastest speed was 73 mph sailing at 51 deg into the true wind, is about 22 – 24 mph of wind. Now this is actually pretty respectable and proves record speeds are easily achievable sailing at the optimum angle to the wind of 110 deg. I will analyse the data over the next few days and present some performance predictions next week.
So what can we conclude from all this. Unless we encounter some unexpected grip problems at high speed, we easily have the performance to destroy all current records, but you do need almost perfect ice, which it is far from right now. Worse still it is not going to get better until they have a big thaw towards the end of the season (March), so we will have to make a plan whether we hang around for a little more testing experience, or realise there is nothing more to learn, until the ice is better, not decided yet.
I will be analysing the data over the next few days and will report back shortly. I also had GPS recorders on the other, conventional ice boats sailing in the same conditions, so it will be interesting to compare the data. Finally I will try to piece together the bits of the video that are usable, and get this posted.
The speed record: (note 30 Km sailed)
This is the wind record from our on site weather station:
This is the nice ice, close in, and it certainly was smooth and fast in this area, but unfortunately it is just way too small:
The rough ice further out……









Good stuff, sounds promising, you need a Zamboni with a blade in front!—Steve
Comment by Steve Stephens — January 24, 2009 @ 6:12 am
Richard
This is just to wish you every sucess from two fellow ice yachters in Sweden!
We met briefly at my neice Georgina’s wedding in Bill and Carole’s house in Cornwall and are just starting our sixteeth ice yachting holiday here
Jeremy & Josceline Hebblethwaite
Comment by Jeremy Hebblethwaite — January 24, 2009 @ 9:35 am
how thik is the ice in the lake?
Comment by hernán piñón arias — January 24, 2009 @ 4:58 pm
Hi Richard
I see your still chasing your dream, great looking machine. Still enjoying the those inexpensive steaks? I noticed you indicated your still waiting for wind, living in cheap hotels and freezing your butt off, things haven’t changed. I have to assume your used to standing on ice by now. We still get big ice here, this year short lived because of snow, but lots on new stuff further out in the bay forming all the time. By the way it’s -33C this morning, don’t you just love it! Should have become a Golf Pro !!! Anyway everyones about the same here Bills in BC at Whistler ( he got married !! ) I’m getting closer for the heart transprant, still flying and icefishing. Keep up the good work and good luck.
From all your BUDS in Thunder Bay
JIM
Comment by Jim Mikulinski — January 25, 2009 @ 12:50 pm
Hi Richard,
Awesome news on the wind yacht, hope you get a good chance to annihilate the previous record (as I’m sure you will).
Any option for hiring the kind of vehicle ice rink’s use for smoothing out ice (or similar)?
Comment by Sam — January 26, 2009 @ 9:40 am
Thanks for the comments, a quick group reply:
@Hernan, the ice is between 2 and 3 feet thick, so very safe and stable. This is one of the main advantages in sailing in such a cold place. Yesterday it was 5 deg F (-15 deg C) during the day, it gets a lot colder at night.
@Jim, Great to hear from you. Yep nothing changes, I don’t give up!!
Glad all is well in Thunder bay, give my congrats to Bill.
@Sam, Those machines that smooth the ice are called ‘Zamboni’s’ and many people suggest that. The problem is mainly that the area is just way too big. You would need a fleet of them running for days to cover a few square miles! I don’t know a lot about them, but I also don’t think they could deal with 3-4″ bumps, and would need some kind of grinder to level it first. But nice idea & thanks for your comments.
Finally a quick update: last night we had a little more snow that has already drifted into knarly mounds, so no more sailing for a week or two. Will update this with a full explanation shortly.
Comment by Richard — January 26, 2009 @ 5:50 pm