Buck Turgidson
Well-Known Member
It's a function of the Brunton prop design which gets loaded when the free stream water speed reduces. The prop design balances centripetal twisting moment which is a function of rpm against hydrodynamic twisting moment which is a function of pressure. thus theoretically at a fixed RPM as the boat accelerates the prop pitch coarsens to provide constant thrust and vice versa.I'm interested in what would cause this, as it would seem to be a significant flaw in the workings of a feathering prop. Do the engine revs drop significantly when you hit a wave? I don't recall this happening with a fixed prop (although obviously the boat does slow down, which is inevitable).
It's not something anyone managed to do successfully with aircraft propellors so I'm not surprised it's not great on a boat where free stream velocity varies rapidly in rough conditions.
But the theory is sound.