Dave Wooley wrote:
Andy how can this work in practice? . In order to produce the equivalent wake pattern you have to be travelling greater than the scale speed. Dave Wooley
That's correct - but I think we have a difference in terminology. I would refer to the Froude speed as the
scale speed for a particular model.
Scaling the speed - simply dividing the original speed by the scale factor - is never going to produce a realistic wake.
If anyone's unsure, here's an example:
The full-size Dreadnought could do 21kts, which means that travelling a ship's length took some 14.8 seconds. On my model at 1/72nd scale if I were to simply scale the speed, and take this amount of time to move the model seven-and-a-bit feet, I'd be driving the model at about half a foot per second. Hardly any wake.
Since water doesn't scale with our models (viscosity, gravity, etc. remain full size) Froude realised that wake patterns could be recreated by moving any model at the
scale speed - equal to the real speed divided by the square root of the scaling factor.
The
scale speed calculator works on this principle. If I put in 21kts and 1/72nd scale, for the Dreadnought, I get Ron's "walking speed" of just under 3mph - about four feet per second - which produces a realistic wake. Or at least it will do, once I get to that stage!
Andy