gomopar440
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2007
- Messages
- 281
I forgot to add the question that I had come up recently. I was reading some posts about selecting the right prop for your hull and motor combo in a thread here in iBoats, and a few links were offered to help the OP find the info he was looking for.
Here's the links BTW: http://www.go-fast.com/boat_speed_predictions.htm, and http://www.go-fast.com/Prop_Slip_Calculator.htm.
The boat hull I'm building, in it's original configuration, weighs 350lbs according to the designer. However I'm adding 2' to the overall length and almost 1' to the width. If I use the same factor (original dimension x 1.14) I used to up scale the dimensions, and apply that to the weight (350 x 1.14) that should give me a rough ballpark figure for my hull (= 399). I also plan on adding fiberglass to the outside to seal the wood so I'm guessing at least another 50lbs added on for that (399 + 50) to get an approximate hull weight of 449. The Tower of Power with the power tilt/trim weighs in at 315 and I weigh 215lbs So hull + motor + me should weigh in somewhere around 979lbs. I'll make it an even 1000 lbs to factor in a bit of fuel as well. When I go to that speed prediction link and punch in the figures I know, Weight = 1000; Prop HP = 115; Constant (fast catamaran is the closest match to the Laker) = 300; and then hit the [Calculate] button in the Speed column I get a speed of 102. Can that be right? Granted I haven't factored in prop slip or anything like that yet, but... Is this thing really going to be a triple digit boat?!?!?!:faint2:
BTW, the motor I'm using is a 1984 Mercury 115 HP inline 6. This was the first year the 115HP rating was measured at the prop shaft. Prior year 115's were actually crank shaft rated, so by the time it got through the gears and such, you had 5-10% less at the prop.
EDIT: Ok I used the second link to find the effect of the prop slip estimate (4-6%) on top speed. Gear ratio on my lower unit is 2:1 IIRC. For pitch I used 19 which is based on Arch's prop testing with Max and Miss Morgan. Max RPM for this motor is 5500. Theoretical speed from the first page is 102. With thos figures if I put in 4% prop slip I get 98 for the actual speed, and if I use 6% I get 96. Those slip corrected speeds are still WAY higher than I was expecting.
I was telling my wife this is probably was going to be a 60-70MPH boat thinking I was probably only fibbing maybe a little bit. She already said she wouldn't ride with me in it at those speeds. It looks like I might have to build this boat in the single seat configuration instead of the two seat setup.:facepalm::laugh:
Here's the links BTW: http://www.go-fast.com/boat_speed_predictions.htm, and http://www.go-fast.com/Prop_Slip_Calculator.htm.
The boat hull I'm building, in it's original configuration, weighs 350lbs according to the designer. However I'm adding 2' to the overall length and almost 1' to the width. If I use the same factor (original dimension x 1.14) I used to up scale the dimensions, and apply that to the weight (350 x 1.14) that should give me a rough ballpark figure for my hull (= 399). I also plan on adding fiberglass to the outside to seal the wood so I'm guessing at least another 50lbs added on for that (399 + 50) to get an approximate hull weight of 449. The Tower of Power with the power tilt/trim weighs in at 315 and I weigh 215lbs So hull + motor + me should weigh in somewhere around 979lbs. I'll make it an even 1000 lbs to factor in a bit of fuel as well. When I go to that speed prediction link and punch in the figures I know, Weight = 1000; Prop HP = 115; Constant (fast catamaran is the closest match to the Laker) = 300; and then hit the [Calculate] button in the Speed column I get a speed of 102. Can that be right? Granted I haven't factored in prop slip or anything like that yet, but... Is this thing really going to be a triple digit boat?!?!?!:faint2:
BTW, the motor I'm using is a 1984 Mercury 115 HP inline 6. This was the first year the 115HP rating was measured at the prop shaft. Prior year 115's were actually crank shaft rated, so by the time it got through the gears and such, you had 5-10% less at the prop.
EDIT: Ok I used the second link to find the effect of the prop slip estimate (4-6%) on top speed. Gear ratio on my lower unit is 2:1 IIRC. For pitch I used 19 which is based on Arch's prop testing with Max and Miss Morgan. Max RPM for this motor is 5500. Theoretical speed from the first page is 102. With thos figures if I put in 4% prop slip I get 98 for the actual speed, and if I use 6% I get 96. Those slip corrected speeds are still WAY higher than I was expecting.
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