Your conclusions re boat props may or may not be true, I do not address the issue....BUT I question the logic that got you there.John Vigor wrote:Eureka!
When the rotating wings of a helicopter are stopped in flight, they stall. They offer little resistance, the aircraft plummets to the ground, and you have to spend half an hour with the Superglue putting it all together again. But if the wings are allowed to revolve, they generate lift--the autogyro effect--and the helicopter will glide to a reasonable landing.
A stalled helicopter blade is motionless, therefor only the surface area presented to the air will offer resistance, with a four bladed prop that is precious little and the hull does as you say fall like a rock. So why does an unpowered but free wheeling helicopter prop allow for a glide? Simple it is spinning in the same direction as it would if powered and therefor the blades are acting in their designed function...as airfoils, Which of course provide lift(i,e, resistance to falling). If you were to reverse those blades so the lift was downward you could beat the rock to the ground! Lovely thought that, eh?
oh yeah and do not forget that that lift is generated first at the outer tips and then as the relative speed increases the lift increases towards the center, think angular momentum.
But please NOTE the blades are acting in reverse to the airflow when freewheeling as opposed to WITH the airflow when powered. Which is why the helicopter cannot generate sufficient lift to climb fro the static condition of freewheeling(you could stall the blades, fall faster and theoretically for a short time after releasing thme generate sufficient lift(angular momentum at the tips) to halt the descent, but dammed if I'd try it!)
Helicopters are cool, and complicated critters.
;)
...but not being an aeronautical engineer the above may be just as much hogwash and conjecture as all of the preceeding LOL
Forward Ho, carry on and all that tommy rot for the Sun rose earlier today than yesterday!