is a 42 page report covering "tank tests" and detailed engineering studies of exactly the question of propeller drag (locked vs. freewheeling). The report is objectively written and includes graphs, charts, pictures, engr. formulas, and is fully referenced. It was published in late 2007, and represents the latest scientific research on this subject.
The report can be accessed (and printed), see the URL in my above post. Here are some quotes from the report....
"Adding to this confusion is the myth of common currency amoung many yachtsman that the practice of locking a fixed blade propeller to prevent rotation results in less drag than would allowing it to freewheel"
"The experimental results confirm that a locked propeller produces greater drag than does a freewheeling screw (up to 100% more drag was observed, this being at the higher speeds). Furthermore, for the freewheeling case, the magnitude of the hydrodynamic resistance is significantly affected by the amount of frictional torque on the shaft, low torque being accompanied by low drag."(this means that the more friction you have in your drivetrain the slower your gonna sail)
The report shows that for moderate displacement hulls the parasitic drag for a locked prop is 14.8%, while for the frewheeling prop it is 7.3%. For heavier displacement hulls the numbers are 3.4% and 1.7% respectively.
All of this to support and prove what most thinking sailors already know intuitively. The energy from the water rushing against the propeller can go either into spinning the propeller or into slowing the boat (those are the choices).
One can only hope that the perpetraters of the "myth" can finally see the light and admit with dignity their folly. Course they still have their helicopters, motorcycles, escalators, and windmills to fall back on.
What I suggest in the meantime is if you can get any "proplocker" in a race, you oughta have easy pickins with a 1/4 to 1 MPH advantage.
Darrell
P.S Did I mention "EUREKA"