sailing puzzle
- Richard O'Brien
- Captain
- Posts: 653
- Joined: Fri May 14, 2004 8:20 am
- Location: Lakewood, CO. Mercury 60hp bigfoot M0427B404
sailing puzzle
Two people own identical sailboats. The have gotten tired of
racing them the normal way, and decide to hold a different kind of
race: a race against time over a preset course. The race may be
held at any time by either boat, and the person who picks the best
weather conditions will win.
The course is 5 miles long, and runs downstream on a straight
river whose current is 5 miles per hour. (You may neglect such
considerations as eddies near the shore--assume laminar flow at
5 mph).
One person sails the course on a day when a 5 mph wind is
blowing straight down the river. The other person sails the course
in a flat calm. Who wins, and why?
courtesy of Dr. Kenhelm Philips, Univ of Alaska
answer to be published manana'
racing them the normal way, and decide to hold a different kind of
race: a race against time over a preset course. The race may be
held at any time by either boat, and the person who picks the best
weather conditions will win.
The course is 5 miles long, and runs downstream on a straight
river whose current is 5 miles per hour. (You may neglect such
considerations as eddies near the shore--assume laminar flow at
5 mph).
One person sails the course on a day when a 5 mph wind is
blowing straight down the river. The other person sails the course
in a flat calm. Who wins, and why?
courtesy of Dr. Kenhelm Philips, Univ of Alaska
answer to be published manana'
Last edited by Richard O'Brien on Tue Nov 15, 2005 6:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Gerald Gordon
- First Officer
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- Location: O'ahu, Hawai'i
-
Frank C
Same time, one hour elapsed for both boats. Both boats travel with the current, and the 5 mph wind provides no added progress, as his apparent wind is zero.
(Assumes that the guy in flat calm leaves sails furled ... if he chose to pole out a sail, he would retard the downstream progress he's making with the current ... but that wouldn't be smart, would it?)
(Assumes that the guy in flat calm leaves sails furled ... if he chose to pole out a sail, he would retard the downstream progress he's making with the current ... but that wouldn't be smart, would it?)
- baldbaby2000
- Admiral
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I would think it would be the guy who had the wind behind him. With the current pushing him at 5 mph and the air moving at 5 mph there would be no air resistance since he's moving the same speed as the air (the air's frame of reference and the water's frame of reference are the same). The guy on the calm day would have an apparent headwind which would slow him down even if his sails weren't up.
Bb
Bb
- Sloop John B
- Captain
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- Sailboat: MacGregor 26X
- Location: Florida 'Big Bend'. 02x Yamaha T50
- Richard O'Brien
- Captain
- Posts: 653
- Joined: Fri May 14, 2004 8:20 am
- Location: Lakewood, CO. Mercury 60hp bigfoot M0427B404
puzzle posed correctly
Puzzle is posed correctly!Sloop John B wrote:
I think Richard screwed up the puzzle. If he posed it correctly, it would have been a tie.
-
Frank C
- Sloop John B
- Captain
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- Joined: Sat Jan 03, 2004 2:45 am
- Sailboat: MacGregor 26X
- Location: Florida 'Big Bend'. 02x Yamaha T50
Yeah, okay.
'One person' wins because he has wind and current. The 'other guy' just has current. This is as simple as football about who is going to win.
Inject something we didn't know about for your solution
Oh, now wait. A five mile current with a five mile wind would put 'one person' in a flutter.
A five mile current would put 'other guy' in a five mile current.
Yeah, I suppose they cross the finish line together, one fluttering and the other being drug with the current
Hey man, this is too complicated for us liberal arts types.
'One person' wins because he has wind and current. The 'other guy' just has current. This is as simple as football about who is going to win.
Inject something we didn't know about for your solution
Oh, now wait. A five mile current with a five mile wind would put 'one person' in a flutter.
A five mile current would put 'other guy' in a five mile current.
Yeah, I suppose they cross the finish line together, one fluttering and the other being drug with the current
Hey man, this is too complicated for us liberal arts types.
Actually, the guy sailing in calm is the only one who can do something. Try to think relative to the water (imagine no river banks) - the one sailing downwind (5 kt) with 5 kt current will be actually in a complete calm conditions - so he has no ability to control his progress. The one who is sailing on the calm day will simply have to sail against the 5 kt wind. He will tack and he will win the race. Period.
- richandlori
- Admiral
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Despite forming consensus it is actually other way around.
It is comparison of velocity make good over ground (VMG) in two situations:
1. One guy with no wind and 5 kn current (VMG = 5 kn)
2. Other guy with no current but 5 kn head wind.
Who win this...???? To use description from puzzle: the person who sails the course on a day when wind is blowing straigh down the river. It may seems like paradox but do not forget that by sailing he/she will create drag which will slow him/her down. To move boat through water more avaiable energy will be wasted for friction and other drag the in case where boat will be standing still in the water (but still moving over ground).
It is comparison of velocity make good over ground (VMG) in two situations:
1. One guy with no wind and 5 kn current (VMG = 5 kn)
2. Other guy with no current but 5 kn head wind.
Who win this...???? To use description from puzzle: the person who sails the course on a day when wind is blowing straigh down the river. It may seems like paradox but do not forget that by sailing he/she will create drag which will slow him/her down. To move boat through water more avaiable energy will be wasted for friction and other drag the in case where boat will be standing still in the water (but still moving over ground).
Hmm... maybe this isn't a "sailing puzzle" at all. Maybe it's one of those logic puzzles with a twist.
Dr. Kenhelm Philips, Univ of Alaska is apparently the author so a quick look at his work might give us a clue.
Google.. Doh. Nothing found. Does he exist? Does the river exist?
Oh well. I'll look forward to manana.
Dr. Kenhelm Philips, Univ of Alaska is apparently the author so a quick look at his work might give us a clue.
Google.. Doh. Nothing found. Does he exist? Does the river exist?
Oh well. I'll look forward to manana.
- craiglaforce
- Captain
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- Joined: Fri Jan 02, 2004 8:30 am
- Sailboat: MacGregor 26X
- Location: Houston, Tx
