Is that the same as an Ekranoplan?Nick wrote:Wing in ground effect - essentially an aircraft that only flies in ground effectWhat is a wig?
see the WIG page
Invented by those pesky Russians
Maybe I wasn't specific enough with my definition of racing yacht but I was really referring to stripped-out record breakers like IDEC rather than a chentleman's racer with all mod cons like Calissa (have I remembered aright?) frinstance.Gardenshed wrote:No is the simple answer.
The jump to go from displacement to semi displacement/planing is so big in power to weight ratio that very few boats are significantly faster than those of 25 years ago (extreme race boats aside: TP52's, Open 60's, Volvo 70's, Melges 32's etc). We are still governed by the hydrodynamic laws that make moving through the water at more than 1.4 x √(waterline length) very difficult.
What has changed is that more hull shapes allow surfing/semidisplacement sailing and that asymmetric sails/bowsprits can provide more power in an easier to control way. After you've added a fridge & compressor, heating system, pressurised hot & cold water, decent sized engine, decent sized water & fuel tanks, anchor & 50m chain, dinghy & outboard, battery bank, pilot books, charts, wine, decent crockery & glasses ... you're back to displacement sailing!