I came across the concept in a yachting forum some time ago & was wondering if anyone had any theories on the concept. ( see pic) Would the wedge shaped rudders on power boats benefit ?
The theory is that the trailing edge is angled at 45 degrees so that the vortices coming off the trailing edges mesh with each other instead of hitting each other.
This creates a more narrow turbulence behind the rudder which means less water being dragged by the rudder. So with less drag the boat goes faster.
As the drag on anything through the water is an exponential curve in relation to speed my thoughts were that on a yacht with a fairly low drag co-efficient at say 10mph to a powerboat with a much higher drag at 80mph any drag reduction would result in higher speeds.
Any one ever tried it?
Cheers.
Paul.
The theory is that the trailing edge is angled at 45 degrees so that the vortices coming off the trailing edges mesh with each other instead of hitting each other.
This creates a more narrow turbulence behind the rudder which means less water being dragged by the rudder. So with less drag the boat goes faster.
As the drag on anything through the water is an exponential curve in relation to speed my thoughts were that on a yacht with a fairly low drag co-efficient at say 10mph to a powerboat with a much higher drag at 80mph any drag reduction would result in higher speeds.
Any one ever tried it?
Cheers.
Paul.
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