Well THIS skull realizes that in the first place the prop of a boat is BEHIND the hull and pushes forward, and a helicopters blades are above((read in front of) the hull and pulls(or technically lifts)yes, they both spin the same in realtion to their load WHEN UNDER POWER.John Vigor wrote: What my critics overlook, in their eagerness to conduct their own auto-da-fé and have me publicly burned at the stake for my heliheresy, is the fact that a helicopter's blades do not reverse in direction whether it is rising under power, or freewheeling in the autorotation mode. They spin exactly the same way. The very same thing happens to a sailboat's propeller. It does not spin in reverse when you put the gear in neutral and the boat drags it through the water.
It may take a few centuries more for this to sink through some skulls, and I don't expect to be around at that time, but I have no doubt maritime history will accord me due recognition. St. John the Heli-Eccentric. Yes, I quite like the sound of that.
Cheers,
John V.
When a helicopter is unpowered the energy comes from BELOW the prop(i.e. REVERSE) whereas the boat prop does indeed continue in the same diection...BUT the energy comes NOT from the engine now, but from the water whose movement (energy) comes from the sails; hence the boat at some speed lower that that required for hull speed must give up some power to turn the prop. The hull therefor has lost some of its 'steam'.
Continuing with the poor beknighted copter analogy the resistance to falling directly when the rotor is freewheelling is literally the drag created by the wind rushing past the hull UPWARDS. The spinning rotors all the time extracting the energy of that airflow in order to make the rotor turn which in turn through the airfoils of the blades provides the 'lift'(read resistance when un powered).
Look one thing that you seem to have overlooked is that a prop on a boat is more of a SCREW than an airfoil, as a result if you will simply look at any prop directly on its axis the blades fill the view: locked they produce a solid two dimensional wall, and on a three dimensional plane an inclined plane(s). Now look at any aircraft propeller, including the blades of a helicopter and you will see NOT a screw(inclined plane, but a winglike(airfoil) shape quite smaller than the area it traverses.
Will a screw of 1 foot diameter passthrough something easier than a solid 1 foot diameter disc? I believe highschool physics would answer that question. You're not comparing even apples and oranges, more like mangoes and coconuts...and all the nuts ain't on the tree! heheh Further the airfoil, because it generates lift(force) at a much more efficient rate than the simpler screw produces its efficiency(simple mechanical advantage), it offers even less resistance.
Want to argue about how many angels can dance on the head of a pin? Why? Simply go out, set a few bird snares to catch a couple of the heavenly sparrow types and put on a little Creedence Clearwater Revival....or Lawrence Welk if they have a tinge of grey to the plumage. You'll have your answers.
........in other words stuff that copter back in the box and go to hauling some props at madding speeds about the Sound and measure the resistance.
(in all the above gobbledygook is a STRONG clue to the answer of the free or locked BOAT propeller question, which I take it is still the prime issue of curiosity in this snowdrift we have produced! but not being many things, physicist not the least, I will leave that for the genuine articles to unravel for us!heh)
;)
One thing is for certain this is a lot more entertaining than another Cetol or Fortress wrangle!!!!!