Prop slippage is the real unknown if you have measured everything else.
However, as Barry stated he wanted to verify that his slippage was in an
acceptable range. No other way to do it than the formula.
--
Tony
my boats and cars at
http://t.thomas.home.mchsi.com
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"Peter Aitken" wrote in message
om...
"tony thomas" wrote in message
news:kFyfe.67380$c24.3956@attbi_s72...
1. If you are wanting to know what a different prop will do for your
speed. Most know that a 2" pitch change will be about 300 rpms.
2. If you want to know how accurate your speedo is. I have found that
most aluminum props are about 85% efficient. Performance SS is about
90%. A High performance prop like a Merc Lab, Mazco, etc.. are about 92%.
These are just examples. I use the formula all the time. When someone
says they have a 150hp engine that is turning 5500 rpms w/ a 22 pitch
prop and running 80 mph you know they are lying. 61.27 is theoritical
and w/ a good prop at 90% they would be at 55 mph.
Now a lot of speedometers will show 80 mph. Without a GPS the formula is
the only way to really know.
--
I understand, but it still seems to me that the prop slippage is the real
unknown. If you change props then your top RPM will change too, right? If
you put more or less weight on the boat, or clean the hull, then things
will change too. With handheld GPS so cheap it seems strange to me to use
an iffy formulas to calculate speed.
--
Peter Aitken