.... more angle, more walk ? ....Skylark wrote:Propwalk is a result of the shaft angle.
J.
Moderator: Jim Walsh
.... more angle, more walk ? ....Skylark wrote:Propwalk is a result of the shaft angle.
John Nuttall wrote:.... more angle, more walk ? ....Skylark wrote:Propwalk is a result of the shaft angle.
J.
Do a little thought experiment of the "edge case": a prop angled down at 90 degrees from horizontal (that is, the shaft is vertical). The prop would serve only to spin the boat and provide zero forward thrust. Now slowly angle the prop up from that position and imagine how the rotational force on the boat decreases and the forward thrust increases.John Stone wrote:If you are talking about the downward angle of the shaft...then I don’t think so.
Right. Like a helicopter without a tail rotor. Only that does not explain prop walk in a boat with zero down angle. There are others factors at play. Some props seems to have more walk than others. I think the underwater profile of the boat has more to do with it than a a few degrees difference in shaft angle. But that’s just my opinion.wikakaru wrote:Do a little thought experiment of the "edge case": a prop angled down at 90 degrees from horizontal (that is, the shaft is vertical). The prop would serve only to spin the boat and provide zero forward thrust. Now slowly angle the prop up from that position and imagine how the rotational force on the boat decreases and the forward thrust increases.John Stone wrote:If you are talking about the downward angle of the shaft...then I don’t think so.
There's a nice little article here: https://tradewindssailing.com/wordpress/?p=365
Smooth sailing,
--Jim