Rick Stephens
Admiral
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2013
- Messages
- 6,118
Need to think of this as if it is a car always going up hill and stuck in only one gear.. Higher pitch prop is like running in too high a gear, always.
I run a fuel monitoring system. Water conditions (flat vs rough) has a bigger effect on fuel usage than anything else.I know what you're trying to say lol... but I don't necessarily agree... if I was driving my boat to achieve good efficiency, I don't think I would cruise around at full throttle.. I would try to just get on plane but keep rpms low.. same reason cars have transmissions...
If your car had the equivalent of only 1st gear, then you'd accelerate fast but your long road trip would be pretty inefficient and take forever... but if you're car only had 5th gear, your mileage would be much better (if someone gave you a good push start) lol...
Again, not sure this theory works cuz boats and cars are definitely not the same...
Just still makes sense in my head that you would want a prop with higher pitch that would maximize your speed at minimum rpm
You'd hit the rev limiter at 20mph, the engine would have much more power untapped.If your car had the equivalent of only 1st gear, then you'd accelerate fast but your long road trip would be pretty inefficient and take forever...
In 5th gear you're geared for wot. once you start going up a hill you don't keep it in 5th when the rpms drop. 1000 rpms with the pedal to the floor doesn't make sense, right? In a car your torque curve is also typically shifted towards higher rpms.but if you're car only had 5th gear, your mileage would be much better (if someone gave you a good push start) lol...
I see what you're saying, but I think the efficiency gains in a car are mostly due to part throttle conditions (also why the efficiency gains with FI vs. carb are so much greater in a car). In a boat under constant load at a given speed, your throttle is open wider for a higher pitch prop to get the same power (you need the same torque, so you need the same air flow/fuel input). I know @achris did some experiments with different props/speeds/rpms. @scott_danforth could probably add something to the discussion as well.Again, not sure this theory works cuz boats and cars are definitely not the same...
Just still makes sense in my head that you would want a prop with higher pitch that would maximize your speed at minimum rpm
It’s all about maximizing the efficiency of converting HP into thrust.Seems that the most fuel efficient props are ones that give you maximum specd rpm per your motor without overspeeding... if you go too high or low on pitch you decrease fuel efficiency...
Link?