Drag reduction by applying speedstrips on rowing oars

Conference Paper (2016)
Author(s)

C.B. Kuyt

Arnoud Greidanus (TU Delft - Fluid Mechanics)

J Westerweel (TU Delft - Fluid Mechanics)

Research Group
Fluid Mechanics
Copyright
© 2016 C.B. Kuyt, A.J. Greidanus, J. Westerweel
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.proeng.2016.06.198
More Info
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Publication Year
2016
Language
English
Copyright
© 2016 C.B. Kuyt, A.J. Greidanus, J. Westerweel
Research Group
Fluid Mechanics
Pages (from-to)
110-115
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

The objective of this study was to determine the advantage of the application of speedstrips to rowing oars for a lightweight single sculler. The research method comprehended three steps: (1) the analysis of the rowing oar movement, (2) the determination of the change in drag and (3) the composition of a rowing model to establish the advantage that could be achieved. The parameters needed for the model: boat velocity, oar angle velocity and power delivered by the rower, were recorded on a real single sculler. The change in drag due to speedstrips on cylinders was determined by performing wind tunnel experiments. The rowing model (Matlab) simulates a race by using real stroke data of a world-class rower as input, while calculating the drag with the coefficients determined by the wind tunnel experiments. The output of the model is the final advantage by the application of speedstrips to rowing oars. Speedstrips induce a 0.1% advantage over a 2000 m race under calm wind conditions. The advantage increases up to.4% with a headwind velocity of 5 m s-1. For bigger boats, the advantage could be even more significant.