Terry Keeley
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2002
- Messages
- 7,202
I know someone tried this in the past, just can't remember the outcome.
Anyone?
Anyone?
Yup, I tried the flat blades and found the wedge rudders are better.I have a copy of Brian Callahan's paper on ventilated rudders. Basically says that the wedge has less drag than the straight. If I recall correctly, at high speeds the straight blade cavitates a short distance back from the leading edge. The wedge stops the cavitation due to constant pressure rise and reduces drag by ventilating the rear.
That was you and Ron Van right?20 years ago, we tried knife blades. They would not hold the boats straight. Maybe they were not big enough.
We used hammer knife blades. I'm not sure McMaster Carr still carries the same one we used, but this is similar. The advantage is they are hardened and wedge shaped. We cut them down to get the shape we need. The rudder is a huge part of the drag in a SAW boat. We took 1/8 inch off the rudder length and added 2 mph to a 108 mph pass.Thanks for all the input guys, just confirms what I thought I saw. Mikey Ross made a nice rudder blade from a knife but it's flat, the transom "oscillated" back and forth rapidly.
Lohring: The blade in your photo looks like it's a true wedge, is that so? Care to share where it came from?
Great, thanks a bunch!We used hammer knife blades. I'm not sure McMaster Carr still carries the same one we used, but this is similar. The advantage is they are hardened and wedge shaped. We cut them down to get the shape we need. The rudder is a huge part of the drag in a SAW boat. We took 1/8 inch off the rudder length and added 2 mph to a 108 mph pass.Thanks for all the input guys, just confirms what I thought I saw. Mikey Ross made a nice rudder blade from a knife but it's flat, the transom "oscillated" back and forth rapidly.
Lohring: The blade in your photo looks like it's a true wedge, is that so? Care to share where it came from?
Lohring Miller
Terry,
Your rudder blades are awesome. You just need a larger boat.
John
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