an examination of today`s hydroplane
Transcription
an examination of today`s hydroplane
Roostertail The best way to judge a boat's performance from the shore is to watch the roostertail. An even trail of water means the boat is balanced. A choppy or disjointed roostertail an examination of today’s hydroplane D rivers make the turns and commissioners make the rules in unlimited hydroplane racing, but the laws of physics govern how the boat behaves on the water. Aerodynamics and nautical engineering combine to make a hydroplane almost like a hovercraft at top speeds, floating on a cushion of air. The surface area touching the water is about the size of a handkerchief as the boat covers a football field per second, its speed better than 190 mph. The boat corners like a three-ton rock, skipping through the turns. Drivers say the turbulence is similar to being duct taped to a chair and hit with a baseball bat. The boats have two or three Propeller Rear wing About the diameter of a dinner plate, the propeller weighs 17-18 pounds and costs more than $10,000. Cut from stainless steel, it has three blades and the edges are sharp enough to cut skin. The propeller is half-submerged in the water, turns between 9,000 and 11,000 times per minute, and shoots a roostertail 60 feet high and 300 feet long. Ideally, the wing is at a neutral setting, exerting neither downforce ce nor lifting the boat. It actss more as a stabilizer, and also givess teams flexibility to correct other her problems by changing nging the setting g of the wing. ing. pedals, but no brakes. The right pedal controls the gas and stays against the floor for the entire race. The left pedal/pedals controls the front wing, determining how much of the boat is out of the water. "It's what flies the boat," said Dave Villwock, driver of the Miss Budweiser. An apt metaphor, but the equation has a flip side: the less the boat touches the water, the more susceptible it is to blowing over. A gust of wind, an unexpected wave or the spray from another boat is enough to lift the front end, increase the cushion of air underneath and prompt the boat to take flight like a leaf caught 1 Exhaust tailpipe Then and now Power turbine stage/ containment ring (Kevlar scatter shield) Key components Gas generator 1 Rudder About 2 feet long and 6 inches wide and made of stainless steel, the rudder acts just like it does on a sailboat and determines the arc of a turn. Compressor section Starter generator Built half a century ago, Slo-mo-shun IV was the first of Seattle's world champion hydroplanes. Much has changed since it won its first race in 1950: Engine air inlet curl 2 Engine 2 The boats aren't jet-propelled, they just look and sound that way. Their turbine engines come from Vietnam War-era helicopters. Purchased from military surplus, they cost about $80,000 each. The engine turns more than 17,000 RPMs at maximum setting with a high-pitched whine that makes dogs antsy. Exhaust is the only thing that comes out the back. Engine oil tank Slo-mo-shun IV Material: Marine plywood, spruce Weight: 4,500 pounds Engine: Allison piston engine Horsepower: 1,800 Skid fin: 8 inches long, 3 inches deep Drive coupling shaft V-drive gearbox 3 4 Today's hydroplane Material: Aluminum honeycomb, fiberglass Weight: 6,500 pounds Engine: Lycoming turbine Horsepower: 3,000 Skid fin: 30 inches wide, 20 inches deep 3 Gearbox Skid fin A 130-pound piece of metal with an edge so sharp it's covered with a leather sheath on shore. The fin cuts through the water and keeps the energy pointed toward the front, preventing the boat from sliding laterally during a turn. Canopy Windshield Canard The cockpit The driver's perspective Windshield Most teams have gauges monitoring engine temperature, RPM and oil pressure. Only a few are equipped with speedometers since the boat's speed isn't as important as finishing first. Steering wheel Six-layered acrylicplastic composite called Laxon. It's required to be a halfinch thick and some are more than three-quarters of an inch thick. The driver has little lateral vision, seeing only what's in front. Turning is the easy part. Straightening out the boat is the driver's bigger challenge, as the resistance can feel like a car when the power steering breaks. The wheel is linked to the rudder by cables and a big gear. Canopy Most come from F-16 fighter planes and are hinged at the back, popping open just like a jet. Miss Budweiser made its own canopy with a pop-top lid that looks like a submarine. The boats don't come with keys. Instead it's a toggle switch the driver holds down to activate the starter. Another toggle sends a stream of fuel to the engine. Seat belts A five-point harness with one buckle that fastens just below the sternum. Seat Side-view mirrors Right pedal Left pedal Controls the canard, which is the boat's front wing. Pushing the toe down directs the front of the boat toward the water. Heel down and the nose lifts off the water. Escape hatch Hinged door that can be opened from inside the cockpit or outside, allowing a driver to be extracted quickly from an upside-down landing. One on either side of the cockpit, each about the size of those on a car. Except the boat's mirrors don't have a disclaimer about objects being closer than they appear. Mike Hanson calls it running on the ragged edge when the boat is riding high on a cushion of air and is no longer being whacked by waves on the water's surface. "Everything kind of evens out," says Hanson. The physics Stage 1 The seat is about 36 inches wide, and fitted to the driver's taste. Most are made from compressed foam that absorbs energy to create a softer ride for the driver. Sources: Drivers and crew members of all unlimited racing teams, Competition Specialties. Research and reporting: Danny O’Neil and Mark McTyre The less the boat touches the water, the faster it goes, a design premise as simple as the law of friction. But this is also when the boat is simultaneously at its fastest and its most vulnerable. Stage 2 Wind or wave is enough to bump the nose up in the air, dangerously increasing the air cushion underneath. The front wing (canard) is the tool the driver uses to increase downward pressure on the nose of the boat and push the front down. Hanson's stomach is the first instrument that tells him he might be in trouble. "You feel it in the pit of your stomach," he says. Kind of like a roller-coaster ride, and the driver knows the nose must come back to the surface to avoid a flip. Ignition Controls the gas and stays pushed to the floor for most of the race. "Mash the gas and turn left," was the formula for N. Mark Evans, an unlimited driver the past two decades. 4 Air intake Provides air to the turbine, but is also vulnerable because spray from the water can pass through the intake and douse the engine. Too much water and the turbine's flame is extinguished, killing the engine. Drivers call it "getting hosed." The anatomy of a blowover The cockpit is smaller than a refrigerator box and custom-fit for each driver, everyone from the 6-foot-4 Dave Villwock to the 5-8 Nate Brown. Gauges Costing upto $40,000, the gearbox links the turbine engine to the propeller. The turbine turns at more than 17,000 RPMs, and this box gears that down by 40-50 percent. Stage 3 Sights and sounds tell the driver when there is no chance at recovery. "When it gets really quiet, and really smooth, you know you're in trouble," says Greg Hopp. Then the driver loses sight of the horizon as the boat climbs into the air. The actual flip can take 3 or 4 seconds. "You know you're in deep doo-doo for a long time," says Ken Muscatel. Sitting upside down in a canopy filled with water, drivers often pop the escape hatch to let the team know they're OK and wait for the rescue team. Oxygen is supplied through a mask worn during the race, and they can hear the footsteps of rescue team members on top of the hull. "It seems like forever, but it's probably about 30 seconds or so," says Mark Weber. The top half of the boat is aerodynamically designed so the air will flow around it. But the bottom is flat like a wall, and the air pushes against it instead of flowing around it. At speeds of more than 190 mph, the pressure is sufficient to lift the 6,500-pound boat into the air. Stage 4 Rescue teams take less than a minute to reach the boat, with the optimal response time being 20 seconds after the crash has occurred. However, that's not always possible since a 1.5-mile course like Seattle's is so big. The driver is removed through the escape hatch. M ICHELE L EE M CM ULLEN / T H E S E AT T L E T I M E S