Please select your home edition
Edition
sMRT ALERT AUS 1

Americas Cup- Team BMW Oracle Racing's 'wind mapping' technology

by Loz Blain www.gizmag.com on 5 Feb 2010
Racer’s Edge laser wind sensor, and it’s built around a technology base that’s being used to optimize wind power generators Catch the Wind http://catchthewindinc.com/
Imagine you're a competitive sailboat racer, about to go into the richest and most storied of all sailing races with a squillion-dollar boat and a razor-sharp crew. Now imagine somebody hands you a device that can quite literally map out the wind activity up to a kilometer out in front of you, showing wind speed, direction and turbulence - and giving you the almost superatural ability to adjust your sails and take maximal advantage of a wind pattern before you even reach it. It's almost an unfair advantage, isn't it? Well, this is the situation that BMW Oracle Racing's Russell Coutts finds himself in as the team gears up to take on defending champions Alinghi in the 2010 America's Cup.

The device is called a Racer's Edge laser wind sensor, and it's built around a technology base that's being used to optimize wind power generators. We caught up with Phil Rogers, CEO of Catch the Wind, Inc, to find out more.

Laser wind sensor - how it works
Catch the Wind's core technology is a laser system that can read wind speed and direction from up to a kilometer from the point at which it's measured. Put simply, here's how it works: a pure colored laser is fired into the atmosphere, where it starts to bounce off all sorts of particulate matter floating around in the air. These particles are moving in a particular direction and with a certain velocity that is an excellent approximation of the wind speed at that point - and when they bounce the laser waves back at the device, the doppler effect causes a slight wavelength shift in the returned light. This doppler shift is enough to calculate wind speed and direction at any given point.

The technology isn't new - in fact, Catch the Wind CEO Phil Rogers points out that 'it was one of the first practical uses of lasers back in the sixties. But what we've done is to implement that technique in an all-fiber optic implementation which has resulted in a very lightweight, compact, rugged and affordable system that can survive a harsh environment.'

Catch the Wind for green power
The technology's primary commercial use is for wind farms - Catch the Wind sells a unit called the Vindicator with a 300-meter range. With incoming wind direction and strength data, the turbines can be tuned for best effect for each gust. The direction the turbine is facing, as well of the pitch of the blades, can be altered to get the best results - high energy yield without excessive flex or vibration in the blades.

But laser wind speed measurement is also handy in a number of other areas - firefighting, for example, where advance knowledge of a change in the wind could save firefighters' lives. Air traffic controllers, with advance knowledge of what wind conditions are moving in, can time takeoffs and landings better.

And you can imagine what an effect this kind of advance knowledge would have for a competitive sailor - knowing what the wind's doing out in front of the boat would give you the ability to tune your sails in advance to get the most out of the wind conditions - and even help you select a better course to take.

Catch the Wind at this year's America's Cup
All of which probably helps to suggest why the betting odds are shortening for BMW Oracle Racing to win this year's America's Cup, which is just about to get underway in Spain - as Catch the Wind has just been named as an official supplier to the team.

As if the BOR 90 trimaran's massive carbon-fiber wing sail isn't enough of a technological leap, the crew will now have access to a wind activity map showing up to a kilometer in advance where the best wind is and what it's doing.

The US$149,500 Racer's Edge laser wind sensor is hand-held, and roughly the size of a pair of binoculars.

'This device is wireless... It can send the data to the onboard computer should the user so desire. It also has its own display, a wireless linked display that can be wrist-worn, or mounted to a display, or on your belt, or whatever,' Rogers explains. 'What the display would show is the wind vectors and speeds around the boat. And it remembers those, so it can produce a wind map.'

Wind speed and vector mapping is a heck of a step forwards from the traditional 'get up high and look at what the tips of the waves are doing' method. It's likely to be an important tool in the BMW Oracle Racing team's arsenal in this race, and it's hard to imagine such a system not being a must-have - or being banned - from future events.

More information and images at www.gizmag.com

It will be fascinating to see the results of the America's Cup this year and hear skipper Russell Coutts' assessment of the Racer's Edge technology and the effect it might have on the contest. The 2010 33rd America's Cup starts on Monday in Valencia, Spain.

www.gizmag.com/
SCIBS 2025Maritimo 2023 M600 FOOTERVetus-Maxwell 2021 v2 FOOTER

Related Articles

Transat Paprec Day 6
A high-tension weekend At sea for six days, the competitors have already completed a quarter of the Transat Paprec course. After crossing the Bay of Biscay, rounding Cape Finisterre, and sailing down the Portuguese coast, the fleet has now stretched out.
Posted on 25 Apr
56th Semaine Olympique Française de Hyères day 5
Israel deny China triple gold On a day of high pressure - in all senses - and drama in all the Medal series, team power and individual brilliance produced some of the closest board Finals in Hyères history.
Posted on 25 Apr
Sled looking to avoid 2024's late season slide
As the 52 Super Series starts next week in Saint-Tropez Fourth overall last season, 2024 and fourth also on 2022's final standings, fifth in 2023 Takashi Okura's USA flagged Sled team start 2025 looking to find the small percentage gains here and there.
Posted on 25 Apr
Smarter at the Dock, Safer at Sea
How Upgrades Are Changing Cruising The service being offered by yacht manufacturers leaps forward every year - responding to a market which demands the highest quality in every aspect.
Posted on 25 Apr
Transatlantic Race 2025 Preview
A North Atlantic adventure like no other The Transatlantic Race 2025 from the East Coast of the United States to the shores of the United Kingdom stands as one of sailing's most time-honored and demanding challenges.
Posted on 25 Apr
A+T Instruments 10th Anniversary Celebrations
"We set out to make the World's Best Yacht Instruments" Globally recognised yacht instruments company A+T Instruments is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year after a decade of successful growth by pushing the boundaries of quality and customer service.
Posted on 25 Apr
Inaugural Anzac Day Cup
Defence Forces and Olympians battle it out on Sydney Harbour Sydney Harbour turned it on this ANZAC Day Eve, as four teams of Australia's finest battled it out for bragging rights in the inaugural Anzac Day Cup Regatta.
Posted on 25 Apr
Is the Côte d'Azure set to deal a dose of déjà vu?
All set for the 52 SUPER SERIES 2025 season opener next week Teams from the 52 SUPER SERIES, the world's leading grand prix monohull circuit, have been hard at work through the winter and spring preparing for the 2025 season, technical updates giving way recently to on the water training.
Posted on 25 Apr
Ficker Cup sets stage for Congressional Cup
Eight international match racing teams prepare to do battle Eight international match racing teams will prepare to do battle at the Ficker Cup this weekend, 25-27 April, an official qualifying event of the World Match Racing Tour, hosted by the Long Beach Yacht Club.
Posted on 25 Apr
Melbourne Osaka Cup Update
A Thrilling Finish for Quest and Lord Jiminy After more than 5,500 nautical miles of ocean racing, just 44 seconds separated Quest and Lord Jiminy in one of the closest finishes of the Melbourne to Osaka Yacht Race so far.
Posted on 24 Apr