Windknife Aluminum Foilnose Extrusions are available in the Duckworks Store.Great for Commercial & Residential in all applications and screening there is so much that you can use Aluminium Louvres Screens for. If you do that I recommend leaving a gap at the ends and sealing the ends with bathroom silicon sealant. If you want to add buoyancy then you could fill the centreboard with aerosol builders foam. Once cured you are ready to glue the rear sheets, follow the same routine, remembering to thoroughly clean and degrease. Starting with anodised materials you should thoroughly clean and degrease the surfaces to be bonded, I used Isopropanol.Īpply the adhesive, clamp and leave to cure following the adhesive manufacturers recommendations, in my case six hours. This may not give the strongest joint but it gives consistent and repeatable results. There are specialist treatments for aluminium to aid bonding such as Alumiprep, Alocrom and Bonderite. Oxidation is the enemy of a bonded joint. That said surface preparation is the key to a good quality joint. It can be seen that there is plenty of headroom for imperfect glue joints. There are many adhesives recommended for bonding aluminium, the foilnose is designed for use with an epoxy adhesive as it includes pips on the bonding area to ensure an optimal 0.25mm thickness for the adhesive.Īraldite 2015 is a good choice of adhesive as it is approved for use in the marine industry however other epoxy glues may be used depending upon the application.Ī 1m length of the foilnose with a high quality bond (17N/mm²) will carry 52 tonnes in shear force (7 African elephants!). For the purposes of this article I built a centreboard similar to a Laser Pico by adhesive bonding two plates to the nose section. If you have access to aluminium welding that is perfect. The rear section can be created in many different ways depending upon your skill set and requirements. The foil nose extrusion has been compressed or expanded to fit the profile, demonstrating the versatility of the extrusion for creating different sized profiles. In the images below we see three sections, each is a NACA 0012 of three different thickness 15, 22.5 and 30mm thick. Therefore the windknife has been designed to make foils between 13mm-35mm thick. Centreboards are often thicker, up to 35mm, and the smallest boats such as the optimist might go down to 15mm thick. For rudders these tend to be designed to fit standard rudder stocks which are either 20mm or 25mm thick, the windknife falls between these two at 22.5mm, the principle is that the foilnose section is compressed slightly to be 20mm thick or expanded slightly to be 25mm thick. The principle application for these foils is for dinghy and beach catamaran rudders and boards.
Equally good for centreboards and rudders. The nose of the windknife foil is a 22.5mm thick NACA0012 section, this is a good middle of the road section. The windknife uses a common nose section which can be compressed or expanded, the rear section on the windknife is simply 2mm thick aluminium or plastic sheet bonded to the front section. Therefore it is valid to use the same nose section for the construction of different sized foils.
Below is a NACA0009 section and a NACA0012 section both of similar thickness super imposed, it can be seen that it is really only the rear sections that differ. The most important part of an aerofoil is the nose section, this is where most of the work is done and hence where most of the accuracy is required.Ī noticeable thing about the front section is that the nose of a long thin foil is similar to that of a short fat foil. Extruded Aluminium foils have been used successfully on Dinghies such as the Laser Pico, 29er, 59er and Mega Byte for many years.