Research Story, Media Release, Learning & Teaching |
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Bid for the world's fastest sailboat starts here |
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Friday, 26 October 2007 | |
University of Adelaide engineering students are building a marine vessel they hope will break the world sailboat speed record. The revolutionary craft - known as a wing-borne hydrofoil [1] (WBHF) - is the first of its kind in the world and will be one of the dozens of final-year engineering student projects on display to the general public at the University's North Terrace Campus today (Friday 26 October). A team of Mechanical Engineering students [2] has been designing and building the first wing-borne hydrofoil sailing craft, based on the patented invention of an Adelaide mathematician and scientist, Stephen Bourn. "The hydrofoil will literally 'fly' more like a plane than a boat," says student team leader Luke Rogers. "There is a hull, but in place of a sail there is a wing, inclined and offset to the side, and in place of a keel there is a hydrofoil. The wing pulls the hull up to fly just above the waves smoothly, silently and incredibly fast." Students have completed the hydrofoil's designs and have begun manufacturing the craft. Extensive use of carbon fibre composite sandwich construction, with the latest vacuum resin infusion techniques, are helping to ensure high strength and minimum weight. Parts of the craft as well as the full designs will be on display to the public today. Mr Rogers says when completed, the hydrofoil should:
Inventor Stephen Bourn says the design was inspired after a fresh look at the basic principles of sailing. "An exploration of the absolute limits to performance led to a revelation of a new fundamental 'law of motion' applicable to all sail craft," Mr Bourn says. "Paradoxically, in light to moderate winds, with the hull still in the water, the wing-borne hydrofoil will be just as fast but easier and safer to sail than the very quickest currently existing boats, because of inherent stability and self-righting properties." Mr Rogers says: "The most amazing thing about the wing-borne hydrofoil is that after working on the design we know it will work, even though at first sight it looks impossible." The students and the inventor have already secured a number of sponsors and are currently seeking further support to complete the project next year. "We'd like to be able to finish the vessel next year so we can challenge the world sailing speed record," Mr Rogers says. The hydrofoil is just one of many final-year student projects on display at the University of Adelaide today. Exhibitions being staged by three schools - Mechanical Engineering [3], Electrical & Electronic Engineering [4] and Computer Science [5] - give students the opportunity to showcase their hard work, technical expertise and innovation to a wide audience, including members of the public, industry and government. Many of the dozens of student projects have industry and government sponsors, and the exhibitions put students in direct contact with key industry figures, giving them an advantage when entering the graduate employment market. The projects cover fields as diverse as aerospace, robotics, computer vision, electronic systems, combustion, noise and vibration control, signal processing, networks, evolutionary computing, T-rays and automotive engineering, among many others. WHAT: School of Mechanical Engineering Final-Year Project Exhibition WHAT: School of Computer Science and School of Electrical & Electronic Engineering Final-Year Project Exhibitions | |
Luke Rogers Email: luke.rogers@student.adelaide.edu.au [6] Website: http://www.mecheng.adelaide.edu.au/robotics/robotics_projects.php?wpage_id=44&title=43&browsebytitle=1 Wing-borne hydrofoil (WBHF) student team Manager School of Mechanical Engineering The University of Adelaide Mobile: 0402 559 588 Stephen Bourn Email: sbourn@wingbornehydrofoil.com [7] Website: http://www.wingbornehydrofoil.com/ Wing-borne hydrofoil (WBHF) inventor Mobile: 0438 879 379 Dr Ben Cazzolato Email: benjamin.cazzolato@adelaide.edu.au [8] Associate Professor School of Mechanical Engineering The University of Adelaide Business: +61 8 8313 5449 Mobile: 0402 785 974 Mr David Ellis Email: david.ellis@adelaide.edu.au [9] Website: https://www.adelaide.edu.au/newsroom/ Deputy Director, Media and Corporate Relations External Relations The University of Adelaide Business: +61 8 8313 5414 Mobile: +61 (0)421 612 762 | ![]() A rendered image of what the wing-borne hydrofoil might look like. |
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[0] https://www.adelaide.edu.au/news/news22521.html [1] http://www.wingbornehydrofoil.com/ [2] http://www.mecheng.adelaide.edu.au/robotics/robotics_projects.php?wpage_id=44&title=43&browsebytitle=1 [3] http://www.mecheng.adelaide.edu.au/ [4] http://www.eleceng.adelaide.edu.au/ [5] http://www.cs.adelaide.edu.au/ [6] mailto:luke.rogers@student.adelaide.edu.au [7] mailto:sbourn@wingbornehydrofoil.com [8] mailto:benjamin.cazzolato@adelaide.edu.au [9] mailto:david.ellis@adelaide.edu.au [10] https://www.adelaide.edu.au/news/image7481/WBHF_web.jpg.html [11] https://www.adelaide.edu.au/news/image7481/WBHF_web.jpg.html |