Oops, Derek, my statement was misleading and should be ammended to:
" As you know, all displacement hulls have a maximum hull speed...a
speed at which an increase in power in no longer proportionate to an
increase in speed and MAY provide the threshold of inefficiency."
Or something along these lines anyway.
Here are a few definitions of "HULL SPEED"
1) The Handbook of Sailing, Bob Bond defines it as "the maximum speed
a hull can achieve without planing" (p 342) and goes on to qualify:
"only boats which can plane, or which have very narrow hulls, can
travel faster than this maximum theoretical speed" (p 327).
2) (Steve)Colgate's Basic Sailing Theory (p 119) states: "the
theoretical speed beyond which a displacement boat cannot go, usually
1.34" times the root of waterline line length.
3). Chapman's Piloting (p 217) refers to the root of the wavelength
multiplied by 1.34 and (p 26) refers to the LWL root times 1.34. He
calls this a close approximation and describes this as the point at
which there is no reasonable increase in speed for the hull for a
reasonable increase in power.
4)MarinerKayaks.com has an interesting approach to the subject,
describing hull speed as "the maximum practical speed of a
displacement (non-planing) hull. Since a wave's length is proportional
to the square of its speed, the wave created by a moving hull will at
some speed become longer than the hull's waterline. At this speed
the stern of the craft will no longer be supported by any of the
following wave crests. You will feel the stern squat into the
trough following the bow wave. You will also notice that far
greater effort yields little increase in speed because to go
faster you must now, in addition to the other forms of resistance,
also work against gravity to climb out of the trough."
Derek, if you are interested in examining hull speed from three
different factors (frankly I think the whole subject is all a little
fuzzy and is terribly over hyped by competition boat manufacturers)
then have a look at this Website.
http://www.surfbaud.co.uk/~wave/surfprop/Formulae/Hull/hull.htmlIt also covers the formulae for HULL SPEED, PLANING SPEED, BLOCK
COEFFICIENT (Hull shape) and the WAKE FACTOR I was referring to in my
previous email about "rolling bow waves" etc.
However, when you've finished reading it all, let's get back to
figuring out an answer to your original question which really amounts
to "what is the most efficient "plunge" for the paddle blades
(floats)on "PS Decoy"?
I have to run right now..but I'll EXPOUND a little later in the week
on MY thought about model paddle wheel blades for what it's worth.
Just didn't want my previous post to cause confusion (in which it
succeeded eminently!)
PJ