Gary King wrote:Yes but your prop has 9" pitch vs ours with 6", more like a disk shaped sea anchor!
I think the drag is worse in heavy winds (proportional to speed^squared), since the boat rarely got above 4.5knots on a broad reach in 25 knot wind.
Hm, I wonder about that, Gary.
I thought that parasite drag from propellers etc. did most harm at low speed. The reason is that hull (wave) drag is very low below 4kts so parasitic drag (skin friction and propellers) then counts for a higher portion of the total drag. In my experience, drag from a foul bottom does more harm to the upwind performance where the horsepower output of the rig is the least. See here: In this write-up, tacking upwind was slow with a dirty bottom, but downwind we went over 6kts, just about as normal. My interpretation of that experience could be wrong, though…
Another thing: You mention that your propeller “pokes a long way out of the hull”, when down. That is well and fine when you motor. However, this could possibly increase the drag when you sail, as the propeller then sits in “clean water”, well outside the 10 – 20cm thick boundary layer. The water inside the boundary layer moves more or less along with the hull, and the further aft on the hull, the thicker the boundary layer is. Graham’s big propeller may produce less damage for its size because it is closer to the hull, way aft of a long keel, and is thus partly hidden inside this boundary layer.
Just a thought...
Arne