I am having an issue with my feathering prop, so I have had to change it to my old 2 blade fixed prop. One question I have is, what creates less drag whilst sailing ,locked in gear or in neutral. Any thoughts?
That is purely for the gearbox, it doesnt matter if the prop is stopped from turning. Wrap a rope around the shaft and tie off, tie the engine keys to the rope.
The recent test in YM showed locking the pop on a 3 blade (they did not do a 2 blade) doubles the drag. The issue is if it is worth the noise and the wear on the gearbox.
The exception to this with a 2 blade if you have a long keel is if you can lock the prop so it is aligned with the keel.
Freewheeling produces substantially less drag than locked. Only lock the shaft if your gearbox manufacturer insists - in which case, get a folder or feathering prop asap. In fact, I'd get one anyway. If you can hide a two-blader close behind a big chunk of deadwood such as a long keel, locking makes sense (and this, I think, is where the myth - as it applies to modern configurations - arises). For a typical fin-keeled sailing boat, the proportion of total hydrodynamic drag caused by having a fixed blade prop is quite horrifying.