Bajansailor
Well-Known Member
Paul, you had noted that :
"Those who own a planing boat at these low speeds would probably do even better because there is less drag - no deep hull, no keel to drag through the water".
For the same length hull there probably would be less skin friction drag (which is basically a function of wetted surface area), however a planing hull will usually have a lot more form drag than a displacement hull at displacement speeds, as form drag is more dependent on the hull prismatic coefficient. Planing hulls have relatively high prismatic coefficients in order to have planing surface aft, whereas displacement hulls usually are designed for optimum prismatic at typical displacement cruising speeds.
The bottom line is that for displacement boats at displacement speeds a large diameter, slow revving propeller will always be more efficient than a smaller diameter propeller that is wizzing round much faster.
Stoaty's Lister is a classic example of this.
Another example is an old Norwegian Colin Archer fishing boat I knew - she is 55' x 17', weighs probably 45+ tonnes, and she used to have a big Wichmann single cylinder diesel (that developed all of about 60 hp) driving a 4'+ diameter controllable pitch prop, going round at probably 120 rpm. And at cruising speed, using maybe 40 hp, she could happily do 6 knots.
Oh, and her flywheel weighed 1,500 kg.....
"Those who own a planing boat at these low speeds would probably do even better because there is less drag - no deep hull, no keel to drag through the water".
For the same length hull there probably would be less skin friction drag (which is basically a function of wetted surface area), however a planing hull will usually have a lot more form drag than a displacement hull at displacement speeds, as form drag is more dependent on the hull prismatic coefficient. Planing hulls have relatively high prismatic coefficients in order to have planing surface aft, whereas displacement hulls usually are designed for optimum prismatic at typical displacement cruising speeds.
The bottom line is that for displacement boats at displacement speeds a large diameter, slow revving propeller will always be more efficient than a smaller diameter propeller that is wizzing round much faster.
Stoaty's Lister is a classic example of this.
Another example is an old Norwegian Colin Archer fishing boat I knew - she is 55' x 17', weighs probably 45+ tonnes, and she used to have a big Wichmann single cylinder diesel (that developed all of about 60 hp) driving a 4'+ diameter controllable pitch prop, going round at probably 120 rpm. And at cruising speed, using maybe 40 hp, she could happily do 6 knots.
Oh, and her flywheel weighed 1,500 kg.....