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What's the proper way to damp time to laylines (or time to mark)?
There's "layline time on x ratio", but I can't see it making difference.
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It uses the damped twd, tws etc so doesn't have its own damping option
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Nick wrote:
It uses the damped twd, tws etc so doesn't have its own damping option
Thanks.
I'm not sure I want to damp out the laylines themselves (as they are very useful when you get up close) but time/ratio seems more like tools to figure out positioning on the course.
I'll experiment some more.
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Putting in the proper damping for the various channels is important to obtain useful data.
How much damping will depend on your instruments (how much is the data the send to Exp already damped) and what type of course you sail (e.g. for log distance legs you can use much higher damping.
Start e.g. with a TWD/TWS damping of 60-90 seconds, TWA and BSP of 10-15. This likely gives a useful time and distance to layline which is somewhat constant and not fluctuating all the time.
What values are other on this forum using?
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When using laylines to a mark to judge the time to tack or gybe i am having problems
If I tack/gybe as it says then I never lay the mark, that is expedition places the layline too early.
Can I adjust the settings somewhere to make it more realistic to the actual conditions i face.
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It is based on the target twa values in your polar - if you want to change the laylines, that is where to do it.
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I see 3 possible reasons why you are not able to lay the mark:
Last edited by ZeeZee (2/02/2020 11:43 pm)
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I understand how the lay/polars work and normally make allowances for the conditions. Is it possible for expedition to take into account the actual TWA/TWS rather than the polars. The current polars I have are good for flat water, but when offshore with a lumpy sea, we start sailing fatter up wind as this gives us the best VMG in a sea way.
Also I have seen variations between our polars and actuals at times due to variation in wind speeds between that at sea level and the top of the mast. This difference can vary in 10 knots of true wind at the top of the mast from almost nothing to only a couple of knots at sea level. These difference in average wind speed across the sails has a big effect on actual speed. E.g. TWS says 10knots but effect polars sailed are closer to 6knots.
What is the best options for working arround these issues?
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Ummmm, big philosphical topics, but the obvious answer from the last is the Scale 10m Wind setting, and the Help File has a calculation about that. But you have been around lots, I don't think it is that simple.
As Zee identified, the problem typically lies somewhere elsewhere, either your polars are out for that TWS/TWA combination, or your speedo is telling you porkies, and so your processor is explaining the BSP/SOG difference as set/drift. As ever, do a compass spin and a speedo recailbration. "If I had $1 for every time I'd been told, etc etc".
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Calibration is good, but as always could be better as is constantly being refined.
The problem is assuming that the calibration is perfect and the polars are right 75% of the time, what do you do when the best VMG's are achieve by not sailing to the polars.