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Inherently beautiful.
From: "Capt. Mooron" All very interesting ... I may not totally agree with your conclusions, but there is some well thought out reasoning behind them. Shen I believe Shen is wrong here Jeff and you are right. The angle of the shaft would definitely affect propwalk. It's not the only factor but it will contribute. I think the biggest villain is pitch and rudder placement as well as flow and entry/exit of the prop wash. I think there is less propwalk on folding/ feathering props. I carry a 13"x19# LH 3 bladed prop with a stern hung tiller that is the size of a small barn door. The prop well unfortunately is small and my upper clearance is only 4". The keel is 5" thick at the shaft and this affects the flow to the prop and correspondingly to the rudder in reverse. Wouldn't it be wise in a twin screw configuration to have counter-rotating props? This would eliminate propwalk altogether. I was coxswain on a Aux CCG with a pair of matched outboards and counter-rotating props.... I could station keep that bugger in the worst conditions with no problems. CM |
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