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Hi
I am looking to buy an efficient solo canoe for sit'n switch paddling. I have narrowed down the choice to a Wenonah Prism or Voyager. I get on alright with tippy boats so tended to favour the Voyager, which is longer and narrower at the waterline and generally held to be 'faster' than the Prism. Trouble is, I keep getting confused by differences between manufacturer's claims and 'expert' or dealers' statements about how fast a particular hull shape is. On their web site Wenonah themselves choose their words carefully and describe the Voyager as 'quite possibly the fastest solo recreational racing canoe we make'. On a German web site http://www.helmi-sport.de/WENONAH/Voyager.html it says something along the lines "The Voyager is no faster than the Prism, unless you apply full power: the ultimate speed of displacement hulls with a rounded bottom has no upper limit." Are they just stating the ....... obvious? That with the same boat and paddler weight, the paddler who applies more power will travel faster? Surely it must be possible to COMPARE how fast two hulls travel if the SAME paddler applies the SAME amount of power??? I've read about hull friction and that hulls can be more or less efficient depending on what speed you are paddling at. I am the wrong side of 60 and not as fit as I have been; if I am looking to do 5+ mph fla****er cruising, will the Voyager be faster at the same effort expended or will the increased hull friction of the longer hull backfire on me and effectively slow me down compared to paddling a Prism? Sorry this is so long - I'd be grateful for your opinions. Jack |
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