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I agree. Having no ability to make the stern go sideways with minimal
forward or aft motion would complicate almost as many single screw maneuvers as it simplified for the person who knows how to use the prop force. It's almost like having a stern thruster. It does mean though that the boat has a good side and a bad side in many docking situation. I have a slip on the difficult side. 75% of the time, the wind is quartering off the dock and half the time, the current is as well so stopping the boat with three forces pulling the stern away is an adventure. We've got it down pat though and I even manage it single handed very often. That said, the tiny propeller, large lateral plane, and high windage of the typical sailboat make the propwalk force minimally useful except in very calm conditions. When there is any wind, you can't make our boat do the fancy things you see the lobster boats doing. -- Roger Long wrote in message oups.com... As long as you treat "propwalk" as the enemy, you will continue to have problems with it and never learn to handle your boat well. Learn to use it, treat it as your friend, compensate for it, and you'll soon be wondering what all the fuss is about. Accept it..... single screw or twin screw..... prop walk is an important consideration to your boat's handling. Shen Roger Long wrote: "Capt. JG" wrote My question was how to correct it from a mechanical view, not how to correct it by technique. It's very difficult to correct mechanically. Physics are against you. Open wheels are always going to walk. Variations in size and number of blades with change the degree but the psychological effect of spending a grand or more to reduce the problem will often be greater than the actual change in forces. The difference in water density with depth makes the wheel act like a paddle wheel (grossly oversimplified explanation warning). Three things you can do: Put the prop in a nozzle. You really won't be happy with the drag under sail of this arrangment! Twin props. Not much better from the drag standpoint. Angle the shaft to counteract the effect and normal backing speed. Going forward faster and with more rudder authority, the off center thrust will not be as noticeable. Neither of these are practical as a retrofit. -- Roger Long |
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