- #36
A.T.
Science Advisor
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You need a relative velocity between air and surface in both cases: tacking boat and DDWFTTW cart.rcgldr said:I don't like the propeller acting as a pair of tacking sailboats analogy, as the key is interacting between two media moving at different speeds with respect to each other.
There is no significant difference if you compare them correctly: The motion of the boat corresponds to the motion a propeller blade section, not to the motion of the cart chassis.rcgldr said:There is also a significant difference. At high speed on a tacking sailboat, the apparent wind is almost a headwind (small Beta angle), and most of the lift force is perpendicular to the boat, coexistent with an opposing force from the water | land | ice, with no contribution to the boats speed, and only a small component of the lift is in the direction of the boat's heading that contributes to the boats speed. For the blades of a propeller, the apparent wind is even closer to a headwind, but in this case, the lateral component of lift is contributing to almost all the thrust, while the "forwards" direction of lift and drag combine to produce a rotating air column behind the propeller.
Here the vectors for tacking downwind with VMG > WS:
And here the same vectors for a section of the DDWFTTW propeller blade:
Not in the diagram but easy to see: Both (sail force, blade force) have substantial DDW components, which are partially canceled by the DUW components of the forces from the keel or the wheel coupling.