Aqua Susurro
Cadet
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2018
- Messages
- 22
Recently had the opportunity to test two props back to back in the same conditions.
Boat is a 74 Starcraft SS repowered with a 165 Mercruiser Inline 6.
The three blade is a 14 1/4 x 21 Solas
The four blade is a 14. x. 21. Mercury
I wanted to experiment with similar dia and pitch so only the number of blades and geometry would make the biggest difference. The 1/4” in dia is the only other difference and perhaps a big one.
The two props behaved very differently. IMHO
The three blade would get the boat on plane pretty good and topped out at aporox. 3700rpm and 60 km/hr tops. With the wind in flat conditions.
The test day we did 56km/hr at 3600 rpm.
The four blade makes the boat Launch! Gets up on plane fast and accellerates easilly up to 4300 rpm.
The test day we did 55km/hr at 4300 rpm.
Over all I think the different blade geometry makes the four blade a clear winner.
In my opinion it is the most exciting change Ive made on the boat. It really is that huge of a difference.
Happy Boating. T
Boat is a 74 Starcraft SS repowered with a 165 Mercruiser Inline 6.
The three blade is a 14 1/4 x 21 Solas
The four blade is a 14. x. 21. Mercury
I wanted to experiment with similar dia and pitch so only the number of blades and geometry would make the biggest difference. The 1/4” in dia is the only other difference and perhaps a big one.
The two props behaved very differently. IMHO
The three blade would get the boat on plane pretty good and topped out at aporox. 3700rpm and 60 km/hr tops. With the wind in flat conditions.
The test day we did 56km/hr at 3600 rpm.
The four blade makes the boat Launch! Gets up on plane fast and accellerates easilly up to 4300 rpm.
The test day we did 55km/hr at 4300 rpm.
Over all I think the different blade geometry makes the four blade a clear winner.
In my opinion it is the most exciting change Ive made on the boat. It really is that huge of a difference.
Happy Boating. T