Hello newbie, welcome to Paddleducks. I'll try and give you a few
answers and I'm sure you will get others from all over the world on
this group....
> 1. Do all paddlewheeler utilize round paddlewheels?
No, there has been experiments with caterpillar drives that actually
resemble the tracks on a dozer. There has also been some helical
wheels (V shaped) that were experimented with to lessen vibration
> 2. How many paddles ,in an ideal situation, would be in the water
at one time?
Usually there is one fully submerged while another is half way into
the water and another half way out.
> 3. What would produce the greatest propulsion, one paddle being
pushed for 10 horizontal feet or the passage of 10 feet of wheel?
They would be equal if both are the same width. In reality the wheel
would cause it can produce faster momentum with several "Buckets"
than a single "bucket" making a 10 foot stroke.
> 4. Were multiple independent sternwheels ever used ie... two
> together with individual controls.
There were a few sternwheelers that had seperate drives so half the
wheel could back while the other half come ahead. These were found
mostly on pool boats. Most sternwheelers have split wheels that are
staggered to give the boat the same pushing power, but allows for
less vibration through the hull. These are always found on excursion
boats, but could be found on a couple of packets and towboats.
Madison Coal in Charleston, WV has three sternwheelers that are
still working the rivers. They're pool boats and used to move crane
flats to and fro. In case you're wondering what a pool boat is, it's
a boat around 100 feet in length, can be larger or smaller, that is
primarily used in the same pool of water above a lock. Every now and
then they'll take trips a little further from home, but mostly they
worked local harbors and made up tows for larger towboats.