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MIRABELLA
V |
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MIRABELLA
V SETS SAIL, APRIL 2004 |
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MIRABELLA
V SAIL INSTALLATION, FEBRUARY 2004 |
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SAIL
CONSTRUCTION, LAUNCHING & MAST STEPPING, DECEMBER
2003 |
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SAILMAKER'S
UPDATE, DECEMBER 2003 |
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PUSHING
THE BOUNDARIES |
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COMPOSITE
COLOSSUS, OCTOBER 2003 |
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SAILMAKER'S
UPDATE, JANUARY 2002 |
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MIRABELLA
V SETS SAIL
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April
2004: 75m
Mirabella V, the world's largest sloop, set sail for the first
time on April 13th, 2004 in the English
Channel, as part of her sailing trials before being
handed over to the
owner. On board for the trials were
owner Joseph Vittoria, designer Ron Holland,
representatives from Doyle Sailmakers, High Modulus and
Ocean Yacht Systems (among others), the Project
Management team and many representatives of VT
Shipbuilding and their contractors.
For Doyle Sailmakers, like everyone else on the team, the
first sailing trials were a long time coming. Doyle’s first contact with the Mirabella V
project was a phone call that Robbie Doyle received from
Joe Vittoria in November 2000. The order was secured
approximately one year later in December 2001 and the
sails were delivered two years following in December
2003. The
sails were set for the first time on Tues. April 13th
2004.
The
first day of trials started with 16 knots true wind
speed at the masthead when the main was set. However,
the breeze slowly died during the day and was calm
through the end of trials on the 14th.
These conditions provided the technical team with an opportunity to test the
sail handling systems that willhoist and lower the
3,900 square meters (42,000 square feet) of sail. The
furlers (Bamar, Italy), winches (Egon Sander, Germany
and Harken, USA), halyards locks, and mainsail track
switch (Harken, USA) were all tested as the sails were
raised & lowered and furled & unfurled over the
course of the two day trials.
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The
Mirabella V project resulted
in many firsts for Doyle Sailmakers. It was the criteria for these sails that
drove the creation of OceanWeave® Vectran sailcloth. Every ounce of the fabric had to be
strength-contributing and stretch-reducing components.
The “segmented mainsail” was conceived to allow a
sail of the mainsail’s size and complexity to be
manufactured, handled and serviced efficiently. Finally, the “compression spring battens”, first casually
mentioned in 1998, were fully developed for Mirabella’s mainsail.
This innovation was essential, because of the
possibility of catastrophic batten failure on a boat of
this size. S
glass was utilized for the top four battens with carbon
being used for only the lower two. The 2nd
and 3rd battens down, which normally are the
most likely to break on an unplanned jibe or tack, were
fitted with gas springs that can compress up to 8” to
relieve high compression loads.
Upon
completion of the trials, Robbie Doyle, CEO of Doyle
Sailmakers, Inc., stated, “The OceanWeave® made a
beautifully shaped sailed that flaked nicely into the
boom and the segmented battens provided a totally smooth
sail. In addition, the batten specification and “compression
spring battens” were unwittingly tested on this first
day when a 30-degree wind shift hit while head to wind
while the main halyard lock was being engaged. The
battens were blown through the backstay, causing the
spring to compress under load. The spring compressed and
re-deployed, allowing the battens to pass through the
backstay undamaged.”
All
of these innovations are now a working reality, and all
have passed their initial test. Provisional patent
applications have been submitted for both the batten
spring system and the segmented battens.
Having
spent some time at the helm, designer Ron Holland
commented, "So far, I'm very pleased with how
Mirabella V is performing. The balance is as predicted and she's light and
responsive on the wheel. I can now envisage that her
crew will easily be able to handle this rig, even though
the mainsail and UPS are by far the largest sails ever
built."
Mirabella
V heads back into the yard for three to four weeks of
finishing work before she will be turned over to her
owner and crew for the summer charter season in the
Mediterranean. To date, two charters have been booked
for June.
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MIRABELLA
V SAIL INSTALLATION
February
2004: From
February 9th through 13th, a three-person team from
Doyle Sailmakers installed four sails on Mirabella V at
the Portsmouth Naval Base in Portsmouth, UK. A
lack of rain and consistent light wind allowed the
installation to progress quickly and efficiently. The
first two days were spent assembling the
six-part segmented mainsail into one piece. Wednesday
was spent on logistical matters and some final details
and Thursday the staysail and jib were raised.
Friday was spent hoisting the UPS, lifting the mainsail
into the boom, and installing the boom on the boat. The
teams from the Mirabella V Project Office, Spencer
Rigging, V-T and the crew made the installation easy and
efficient. Although still a couple months away from
sailing trials, Doyle Sailmakers is pleased that this
stage of the project went so smoothly and is looking
forward to getting out on the water.
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Batten #4 fed through the connecting loops of
sail sections four and five. |
The lower section of the UPS at full hoist. |
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Lifting the Mainsail into the Boom. |
Attaching the Boom to the Gooseneck. |
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SAIL
CONSTRUCTION, LAUNCHING & MAST STEPPING
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The top two sections of the mainsail fitted to
the second batten down. |
Sail Construction in the Marblehead, MA loft. |
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Mirabella V's mast. |
Post-launching. |
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SAILMAKER'S
UPDATE, DECEMBER 2003
December
16, 2003: With her mast scheduled to be stepped on
December 28th, progress on Mirabella V continues
apace. The six sections of the mainsail along with
the six battens are scheduled to leave Boston bound for
Southampton on December 23rd. The battens, too
long to be shipped via air, will be transported by
containership. The mainsail and three headsails will be
shipped via air from Marblehead, MA and Auckland, NZ,
respectively.
Following
is an excerpt from a paper presented at the Royal
Institute of Naval Architects The Modern Yacht
Conference on September 17, 2003. To read the full
paper, click here.
MIRABELLA
V
BATTEN TECHNOLOGY
For
batten development and construction, Doyle Sailmakers
turned to Ted van Dusen of Composite Engineering, a
Concord, Massachusetts-based company.
Ted’s experience includes battens for Team
Adventure and the mast and boom for Bruce Schwab’s
Open 60 Ocean Planet, a competitor in the Around
Alone Race.
BATTEN MATERIAL:
A high roach mainsail presents a challenge for
almost any size sail; a superyacht mainsail with a roach
as large as Mirabella V’s presents a very
special challenge.
The
batten development for Mirabella V was largely a
question of optimization: at the required batten
stiffness, what is the maximum toughness that could be
achieved while minimizing weight aloft? To answer this
question, Doyle Sailmakers and Composite Engineering
surveyed the different material options available:
standard pultruded fiberglass, S-glass and carbon fiber.
Although carbon fiber is renowned for its
stiffness and low weight, S-glass, a tri-axially woven
fiberglass with a reinforcing carbon layer (~15% of
fiber content), has a bending radius before break that
is three times greater than carbon.
It is for this reason that the top four battens,
which will experience the most flogging, highest loads
and least support, were specified as S-glass.
The bottom two battens – the largest and
heaviest – will be constructed of carbon fiber,
providing the greatest weight savings for the battens
that require the least toughness.
The savings in weight from switching from all
S-glass to an S-glass/carbon fiber combination is 145
kg.
BATTEN
END FITTINGS: The inboard and outboard batten end
fittings secure the sail segments and provide a means to
tension the foot and head of each segment along the
batten (see Figure 7).
In keeping with the low-weight, soft construction
concept of these sails, a high strength Vectran line
will run along the luff and leech of each segment and
form a loop at the top and bottom corners. The ropes
will loop around the battens and provide vertical load
transfer up the luff and leech. Webbing loops on the
inboard and outboard ends will be lashed forward to the
batten end fittings to provide horizontal tension.
COMPRESSION RELEASE BATTENS:
The batten materials selected clearly demonstrate
Doyle Sailmakers’ commitment to durability and
toughness. However,
regardless of material selection, certain conditions
will stress any batten to break.
In particular, tacking and gybing often cause the
sail to flog or “snap” across the centerline of the
boat, loading the upper battens and cars significantly.
In order to minimize the risk of breaking battens
aboard Mirabella V,
Doyle Sailmakers has developed the Compression Spring
Batten. The CSB utilizes a spring integrated into the
inboard batten end to relieve this compressive load.
It will be implemented on Mirabella’s
second and third battens down, which are located along
the most aggressive curvature of the roach.
These battens see the highest loads and are
generally the most likely to fracture. With the
implementation of the CSB, the batten will compress
under high loads, reducing the overall length. This
reduces the load on the batten, which minimizes the
likelihood that the batten will break.
Concept
Testing: Compression Release Batten testing
began on a local X-3/4 Ton in winter 2001.
The first stage of testing involved a basic
concept analysis.
During these tests the breaking mode of small
wooden battens was analyzed to determine which events
were most likely to lead to breakage.
The findings supported Doyle’s previous
experience as described above.
Second
stage testing involved the introduction of a relatively
low load gas spring on the inboard end of the batten.
As with the wooden dowel battens, the compressive
load was found to be highest when tacking.
Sailing upwind did not compress the spring.
However, as the sail crossed the centerline of the boat
during a tack it tended to take on an S-shape to pass
through the shorter distance between the straight mast
and the leech, compressing the spring with the inboard
end load. Interestingly,
only the strongest of the various springs exerted enough
force to re-extend after initial compression.
Design:
The
working components of the Compression Spring Batten are
located at the batten’s inboard end, between the luff
car and the standard batten. The dynamic portion of the
CSB consists of a carbon/S-glass plunger that slides
inside the batten. Housed inside of the plunger is a
nitrogen-gas spring that allows the batten to respond to
the extreme compression loads that could cause
fracturing (Figures 9 & 10).
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The
upper rendering shows the interior components
of the CSB (from left to right): the end
fitting and its extension inside the plunger,
a rubber shock absorber and the gas spring
cylinder and rod. The lower rendering shows
the exterior components of the CSB (from left
to right): end fitting, plunger and batten
(with a fitting to secure sail).
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Scale
model of the Mirabella V CSB with block and tackle rigging used to compress the
spring while applying a side load.
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Rendering
showing the mainsail loop concept at the
outboard batten fitting.
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The
interface between the plunger and the batten occurs
through a nylatron bushing that is secured to the inner
wall of the batten. This self-lubricating plastic allows
the batten to slide along the outside of the plunger
without the need for fragile bearings that are more
susceptible to failure. The plunger acts as a rigid
structural member that resists the torque in the batten,
making sure that the batten remains rigid in the dynamic
region of the CSB. By acting as a structural member,
there is no transverse loading of the gas spring, which
can lead to the failure of the spring’s seals. By
housing the spring inside the plunger, the spring is
also protected from water and salt spray. The end of the
plunger will have a hole from which the spring’s rod
will protrude. The other end of the rod will rest
against a retaining wall in the batten that is protected
by a stainless steel plate to resist wear. The back end
of the spring is restrained in the plunger by the end
fitting that attaches to the luff car and will slide
inside the plunger. By enclosing the spring inside the
plunger, the plunger unit can be easily separated from
the batten, allowing for easy removal or replacement of
the spring if necessary.
Spring
Selection: After
exploring mechanical and gas springs, a gas spring was
chosen for the CSB. The reasons are three-fold: First,
the gas spring provides a choice of initial load at
which the spring will begin to compress. This allows the
batten to behave normally until the end loads are equal
to the initial load required to compress the spring. A
mechanical spring does not share this behavior, instead
deforming under much smaller loads, leading to a dynamic
batten in all conditions. Second, the same amount of
travel can be achieved at similar loads with a gas
spring that is physically far smaller than a mechanical
spring. The smaller size allows the gas spring to be
housed inside the plunger portion of the batten instead
of inside the batten itself (see Figure 9). By housing the spring in the
plunger, the length of the batten that must remain rigid
to keep the spring, batten, and plunger properly aligned
is minimized, allowing as much of the batten to retain
the designed characteristics as possible. Finally, the
use of a gas spring allows for some fine adjustment of
the loads that cause initial and maximum deflection. By
varying the cylinder pressure the same spring can work
over a range of loads.
The
spring chosen for the Mirabella V project is a custom, stainless steel spring that is designed
to begin compressing at approximately 8,000N and reach
its maximum deflection of 200mm at 12,750N. Standard gas
springs have a ratio between the initial load required
to deflect the spring and the maximum load around 1.4.
The Mirabella V
project, however, requires a custom spring with a load
ratio of almost 1.6 in order to achieve the desired
behavior. The design loads for the spring were
determined from the buckling loads of the battens.
Batten designer Ted Van Dusen estimates the batten end
loads to be three times the buckling loads of the batten
column, which range from 2,250N – 4,500N, producing
end loads over the range of 6,750N-13,500N. By allowing
the batten to begin compression at an end load of
8,000N, it is anticipated
that the loads will be reduced so that the end loads
will not reach the upper end of the load range, where
fracturing the battens becomes possible.
To read
the full paper presented at the Royal Institute of Naval
Architects The Modern Yacht Conference on September 17,
2003, click here. |
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PUSHING
THE BOUNDARIES
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Mirabella
V, the latest of
Joe Vittoria’s Mirabella yachts, is pushing the
boundaries of modern boat building and sail
construction. At 75 m, Mirabella V will be the
world’s largest sloop, and, with a reacher measuring
1,900 m 2 , Doyle Sailmakers will be building the
world’s largest sail.
The full inventory
consists of a mainsail, staysail, working jib and UPS
(Utility Power Sail), or reacher. All told, the
inventory weighs in at an astounding 1,500 kg - without
hardware!
To read the full extract from the Yacht
Design story, click
here for the PDF file. 
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COMPOSITE COLOSSUS |
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The £33
million Mirabella V superyacht is presenting unique
challenges to its designers and material suppliers.
October 22, 2003:
By
this time next year, the largest single masted yacht in
the world – the Mirabella V – should be making its way
to the Mediterranean from the port of Southampton in the
UK.
The yacht is currently
being constructed – at an estimated cost of £33 million
– by UK warship builder Vosper Thornycroft (VT) for US
businessman Joseph Vittoria. Mr Vittoria, former chairman
and CEO of Avis car rental, has made plans to build
Mirabella V largely from fibre-reinforced plastic and the
project is requiring everything from new sailcloth and
developments in rigging to captive hydraulic winches to be
custom designed and built.
To read the full extract
from the Future Materials story, click
here for the PDF file.
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SAILMAKER'S
UPDATE, JANUARY 2002
January
25, 2002: The "it can't fail" criteria of the
Mirabella V Project presents two distinct challenges to
the sailmaker. The first is to develop material to
withstand enormous loads that is resistant to breakdown
from abrasion, flogging, flex, mildew and delamination.
The second is to design sails resistant to wear from
battens, lazy jacks, and routine handling. The scale of
Mirabella V's sails requires novel engineering that will
take full advantage of Doyle's extensive experience with
superyachts.
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Conceptual
drawing of the Segmenter Batten outboard end
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Conceptual
drawing of the "Compression Batten"
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The upper-mid
batten on Kaos's D4 Segmented Mainsail.
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Materials
Doyle Sailmakers has partnered with a special
applications fabric mill in New England to develop
OceanWeave®, an extremely durable woven sailcloth
utilizing the most advanced synthetic fiber and textile
technology available. In a patent-pending process,
OceanWeave combines a tightly woven, warp-oriented
Vectran x Vectran core with a specially woven and
applied taffeta. The result is a low stretch material
that does not rely on film, which can delaminate, and
does not sacrifice warp or bias stretch performance. The
absence of film also enhances the material's ability to
withstand flexing, crunching, and flogging and to resist
mildew far more effectively than a standard laminate.
Construction
Significant advances have been made in construction
methods. We have filed for a provisional patent
governing the construction of a "Segmented
Mainsail". In this design, the mainsail is composed
of seven separate, yet interdependent, sections. Six
full-length battens join the segments at the top and
bottom edges to form the complete sail. Building the
sail in these segments makes construction, transport and
service significantly easier, as the largest of the
sections will not exceed 315 m2. As part of the testing
phase, we have constructed a prototype 42 m2 X-3/4
Tonner segmented mainsail.
Batten
Development
For batten development and construction, Doyle
Sailmakers is working with Ted van Dusen of Composite
Engineering, a Massachusetts-based company. So far, we
have conducted the first two stages of batten testing on
Kaos, an X-3/4 Tonner.
During
these tests we carefully analyzed the breaking mode of
wooden battens and progressed to a more in-depth study
of the "Compression Batten" concept. The
Compression Batten utilizes a hydraulic spring attached
to the inboard end of a segmenter batten. The spring
relieves the compression load that often leads to broken
battens during tacks and gybes.
Surprisingly,
the compressive load was found to be highest when
tacking and only the strongest of the various springs
tested exerted enough force to extend after
compression.
Future
steps include the addition of strain gauges to record
load while sailing, tacking, gybing, and flogging and
the use of significantly stronger springs that will
compress only when shock loaded. Combination compressed
air/mechanical springs will also be considered. On-water
testing will resume in the spring of 2002.
From our
preliminary sail quotation to the present stage of
development, the Mirabella V Project has proven to be an
exciting design, engineering and construction challenge.
It has been a pleasure to work with the Mirabella V team
of Ron Holland Design, Vosper-Thornycroft and Mr. And
Mrs. Vittoria, all experienced and knowledgeable
professionals. We look forward to pushing the boundaries
of modern sail materials and sailmaking with the entire
Mirabella V crew.
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