Laminar Flow
Well-Known Member
On long keel vessels the leading part of the entire hull, not just the keel, is part of the lift generating surface.
Cutting a ruddy big hole through it for a bow thruster doesn't really make any hydrodynamic sense.
I still struggle with the speed versus cost benefit of a feathering/folding prop on a relatively heavy boat. The math of relative resistance values doesn't really add up, compared to simply letting the prop mill along for an instant 40% reduction, providing the gearbox allows for this.
The greatest benefit for a feathering prop is to be had on relatively light boats at lower speeds. On heavy boats the resistance at relative speeds over 1 rises so dramatically, not to say exponentially, that any advantage of a feathering prop becomes miniscule.
I have calculated the potential speed gain to be, at best, in the neighbourhood of 0.2 kn, for our 8 and-a-bit ton boat.
Of course, there may well be other speed enhancing benefits to be had from a feathering prop, such as helping to cure endemic weatherhelm, by improving flow over the rudder and thus reducing rudder angles, but for straight up, relative resistance reduction the math is a little fuzzy for a heavy boat.
For my money, adding some light, coloured sail is by far the better investment. In light going, we can easily gain another 1.5 to 2 kn by raising the asymmetric. Now doing 5-5.5 kn, instead of just 3.5 kn, really puts the dent into your passage times.
Cutting a ruddy big hole through it for a bow thruster doesn't really make any hydrodynamic sense.
I still struggle with the speed versus cost benefit of a feathering/folding prop on a relatively heavy boat. The math of relative resistance values doesn't really add up, compared to simply letting the prop mill along for an instant 40% reduction, providing the gearbox allows for this.
The greatest benefit for a feathering prop is to be had on relatively light boats at lower speeds. On heavy boats the resistance at relative speeds over 1 rises so dramatically, not to say exponentially, that any advantage of a feathering prop becomes miniscule.
I have calculated the potential speed gain to be, at best, in the neighbourhood of 0.2 kn, for our 8 and-a-bit ton boat.
Of course, there may well be other speed enhancing benefits to be had from a feathering prop, such as helping to cure endemic weatherhelm, by improving flow over the rudder and thus reducing rudder angles, but for straight up, relative resistance reduction the math is a little fuzzy for a heavy boat.
For my money, adding some light, coloured sail is by far the better investment. In light going, we can easily gain another 1.5 to 2 kn by raising the asymmetric. Now doing 5-5.5 kn, instead of just 3.5 kn, really puts the dent into your passage times.