Figure 2. Arcturus TRAC digital stabilizer.Sensors also measure the vessel's rate of roll and heel angle, a reference to the horizon. The sensors and valve are arranged into a servo control loop. When a correction is required to keep the boat level, fins are rotated to create lift. During lift, the higher water pressure on one side of the fin causes water on the high pressure side to tend to wrap around to the low pressure side, creating a tip vortex. Arcturus uses a winglet on the end of the fin to eliminate the tip vortex.
Fast reaction
The lightning-fast reaction time for the TRAC processor is the key to its performance. The fin angle of attack is adjusted 200 times/sec to create roll-countering lift the instant it is detected. As such, the stabilization system automatically adjusts for changes in sea-state, wave angle, and vessel speed.
But, what about reducing vessel roll while anchored, on a mooring, or while drifting? STAR (STabilization at Rest) is a feature added to the TRAC stabilizer that moves fins at the right speed at just the right moment. A three-term algorithm measures roll and controls the fin's movement to generate a smooth counter-acting energy pulse that significantly dampens roll. An electric motor-driven hydraulic pump drives the TRAC stabilizer and optional STAR stabilizer system.
No perceived noise at all
Arcturus makes it a point that careful attention is given to equipment layout and design to minimize noise and vibration. To accomplish their goal of "no perceived noise at all," Arcturus incorporates an inline Pulse-Tone hydraulic shock suppressor from Parker Hannifin Corp. directly at the hydraulic pump outlet in the engine room to stop pulsations and noise before they can travel through the hydraulic lines.
"Inline Pulse-Tone shock suppressors reduce noise associated with hydraulic systems by as much as 6 dB or more. Because every 2.7 dB represents a twofold increase or decrease in noise, the Pulse-Tone can reduce hydraulic noise by more than four times the original level," points out Mike Schubert, senior application engineer for Parker's Hydraulic Accumulator Div.