[Public-list] Propellers
George Dinwiddie
gdinwiddie at alberg30.org
Tue Jul 19 16:00:25 PDT 2005
Jim,
Maybe it depends on the prop design, but I've had people who I took to
be knowledgeable tell me that a free-wheeling prop has a drag comparable
to a disk of the same diameter. They told me this was based on
empirical measurements.
jim mennucci wrote:
>
>
> A free-wheeling prop has more drag compared to what? Compared to a lock
> propeller hiding in the deadwood--maybe. Compared to a locked propeller
> exposed to the normal inlet flow--no way. A locked propeller is a lot
> like a sea anchor--its a flat plate with flow normal to it. Its twisted
> at the pitch angle so its really a sine or cosine function but still its
> what they call pressure drag which is a function of boat speed squared
> and projected area--its really the local velocity of the inflow but for
> this exercise lets just use boat speed. If your racing and your props
> locked while someone else has a folding prop then you at a big
> disadvantage. Allowing a prop to windmill actually solves the pressure
> drag problem. The prop rotates but it doesn't generate any lift, and
> if there's no lift there no drag or torque. There's friction in the
> transmission which retards the free-wheeling rotation which does
> generate some lift and drag but this can be pretty small. So saying
> that there's more drag when windmilling has to have caveats.
--
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When I remember bygone days George Dinwiddie
I think how evening follows morn; gdinwiddie at alberg30.org
So many I loved were not yet dead, http://www.Alberg30.org
So many I love were not yet born.
'The Middle' by Ogden Nash
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