Is a boat pushed or pulled by the prop.......that is the question

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  • tlandauer
    Fast Electric Addict!
    • Apr 2011
    • 5666

    #16
    Interesting thoughts, I don't know if it is any different, but on certain aircrafts where you have props behind the trailing edge of the wing, they are referred as "pusher props"
    But a scholarly look into this subject is far more involved.
    XB-35.jpgConvair_B-36_Peacemaker.jpg
    And then, you have the counter rotating props as with the famous Russian Tu-95:Russian Tupolev Tu-95 Bear Strategic Bomber.jpg

    I am definitely liking this thread!
    Too many boats, not enough time...

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    • Make-a-Wake
      FE Rules!
      • Nov 2009
      • 5557

      #17
      Originally posted by sundog
      I think the answer to your original question is yes. What do I win?
      A trip to Eureka Springs to hang out with the cool hippies, all expenses paid.........................by you
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      • Make-a-Wake
        FE Rules!
        • Nov 2009
        • 5557

        #18
        Originally posted by Fluid
        One reason that surfacing propellers are "faster" is because they create a low pressure 'vacuum' area in front of the prop, this is well documented. The result of the pressure differential is strong forward movement.




        .
        That sounds logical................. I knew pressure differences would come into play at some point
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        • tlandauer
          Fast Electric Addict!
          • Apr 2011
          • 5666

          #19
          I guess to me it is a separate aspect. The prop is pushing the water regardless if it is mounted in the back or the front of the boat. However, the force that is exerted on the components are different. If the prop is in the front, there would never be a thread about THRUST Bearings between the collet and motor or at the strut. The prop would be pulling the rotor of the motor. ( provided the motor is mounted pointing forward) NO?
          I go back to pushing a car, if you are behind, you are pushing, if you are infront pulling with rope, you are pulling. But in both cases you legs are PUSHING against the pavement to propel yourself forward.
          Then, what do I know, I have a concert to play tonight.
          Last edited by tlandauer; 03-12-2015, 04:26 AM.
          Too many boats, not enough time...

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          • Doug Smock
            Moderator
            • Apr 2007
            • 5272

            #20
            Remember that thing called thrust?

            Thrust is a reaction force described quantitatively by Newton's second and third laws. When a system expels or accelerates mass in one direction, the accelerated mass will cause a force of equal magnitude but opposite direction on that system. The force applied on a surface in a direction perpendicular or normal to the surface is called thrust.

            BTW Some people refer to props as "wheels" also.
            Last edited by Doug Smock; 03-12-2015, 06:42 AM.
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            • keithbradley
              Fast Electric Addict!
              • Jul 2010
              • 3663

              #21
              Originally posted by Make-a-Wake
              Props are also called screws btw, for a reason im sure, and i was making an analogy that i thought would make it simple.

              Also, if a chain is hooked to the rear axle of a rear wheel drive car and run under it out front and hooked to a tow vehicle................it is being pulled...............by the rear mounted driveline............which propels the vehicle when under its own power. Things can be pulled from anywhere.
              I don't mean to rain on your parade, but the "out front" placement of the tow truck means:

              1) Your argument is moot, because the truck is in FRONT of the vehicle relative to the direction it is travelling. Your scenario doesn't dispute Peter's statement in any way.

              2) The tow truck driver is clearly an idiot. Don't let him touch your car.
              www.keithbradleyboats.com

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              • Make-a-Wake
                FE Rules!
                • Nov 2009
                • 5557

                #22
                Thanks Keith, good to know that the driver in my made up scenario is incompetent, I'll be sure to hire a different fake driver next time to avoid a possible insurance claim which could raise my rates and may cause me financial trauma.
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                • tlandauer
                  Fast Electric Addict!
                  • Apr 2011
                  • 5666

                  #23
                  Originally posted by Make-a-Wake
                  Thanks Keith, good to know that the driver in my made up scenario is incompetent, I'll be sure to hire a different fake driver next time to avoid a possible insurance claim which could raise my rates and may cause me financial trauma.




                  Hmmm.... M-a-W, you and I have a lot in common.
                  Too many boats, not enough time...

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                  • iop65
                    Senior Member
                    • Mar 2013
                    • 367

                    #24
                    Originally posted by Doug Smock
                    Remember that thing called thrust?

                    Thrust is a reaction force described quantitatively by Newton's second and third laws. When a system expels or accelerates mass in one direction, the accelerated mass will cause a force of equal magnitude but opposite direction on that system. The force applied on a surface in a direction perpendicular or normal to the surface is called thrust.

                    BTW Some people refer to props as "wheels" also.


                    actually it"s Bernoulli's law : P x V=cst

                    the change in pressure due to the difference in speed the water has on the 2 sides of the blade makes the prop wants to move to one side and so creates thrust , same reason as why an airplane goes up due to the shape off it's wings or a helipcopter wants to go up when turning the rotor

                    in fact Newton's laws have nothing to do with the questions why the boats wants to go forward or an helipcopter wants to go upwards
                    Newton's laws explain why a boat has torque roll or make it necessary for an helicopter to have a tailrotor( or an other solution like contra rotating props)
                    Last edited by iop65; 03-12-2015, 07:15 AM.

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                    • Darin Jordan
                      Fast Electric Addict!
                      • Apr 2007
                      • 8335

                      #25
                      This prop is "pulling" the boat... :)

                      IMG_0419.JPG

                      IMG_0420.JPG


                      Maybe it's been mentioned above... I don't know, I haven't ready this whole thread (this kind of minutiae makes my head hurt... ) but I think any "push" or "pull" argument is really relative to where the "propelling" device is located in relation to the object being moved.

                      How the prop actually moves ITSELF through the water can be open for debate, or detailed analysis, or cage fighting, but clearly the prop is "Pulling" the hull if out front, and "Pushing" if out back... Unless you hit reverse, which you CAN do if you own a Pro Boat RTR...

                      OK... enough of this... time to go finish prepping race boats... where I could give a rip if the prop is pushing or pulling, and instead be more concerned if I remembered to tighten the prop nut...
                      Darin E. Jordan - Renton, WA
                      "Self-proclaimed skill-less leader in the hobby."

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                      • Make-a-Wake
                        FE Rules!
                        • Nov 2009
                        • 5557

                        #26
                        I guess i may have said it wrong initially:

                        Should have said, is the prop "boring/biting" into the water in front of it, drawing water in towards it......................"pulling" itself into the undisturbed water ahead of it.......................I wasnt actually referring to where it was on the boat.

                        Like Darin just said, how the prop moves itself thru the water..................which is how the boat is propelled by being attatched to the hull 'somewhere'.

                        It was just a physics question.
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                        • T.S.Davis
                          Fast Electric Addict!
                          • Oct 2009
                          • 6220

                          #27
                          It's all thrust.

                          There isn't enough blade to create useful negative pressure on the front side of the prop like a wing so it's not that. The screw analogy doesn't really fit because the water isn't a solid. If the screw going in actually moved the material that the wall is made of then they would be the same. Haha Maybe it would if the screw were turning at say 25k rpm. Then the screw becomes a propeller instead of a screw. "Propeller" as in propulsion.


                          2 cents. Opinions will vary.
                          Noisy person

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                          • T.S.Davis
                            Fast Electric Addict!
                            • Oct 2009
                            • 6220

                            #28
                            I would think too that if the propeller was only pulling itself through the liquid then the thrust cone would not affect the ride attitude. We all know that's real.
                            Noisy person

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                            • fox88gt
                              Senior Member
                              • Jul 2013
                              • 103

                              #29
                              I'm copying a link to website I found that contains information derived from a book that Mercury Marine published a number of years ago. The book is called "Everything You Need To Know About Propellers." Mercury probably designs and builds more propellers than any other company in the world.



                              Here's an exerpt from the text in the link:
                              The "Push/Pull" Concept

                              To understand this concept, let us freeze a propeller just at the point where one of the blades is projecting directly out of the page (Figure 3-1). This is a right-hand rotation propeller, whose projecting blade is rotating from top to bottom and is moving from left to right. As the blade in this discussion rotates or moves downward, it pushes water down and back as is done by your hand when swimming. At the same time, water must rush in behind the blade to fill the space left by the downward moving blade. This results in a pressure differential between the two sides of the blade: a positive pressure, or pushing effect, on the underside and a negative pressure, or pulling effect, on the top side. This action, of course, occurs on all the blades around the fall circle of rotation as the engine rotates the propeller. So the propeller is both pushing and being pulled through the water.

                              Thrust/Momentum

                              These pressures cause water to be drawn into the propeller from in front and accelerated out the back, just as a household fan pulls air in from behind it and blows it out toward you (Figure 3-2).

                              The marine propeller draws or pulls water in from its front end through an imaginary cylinder a little larger than the propeller diameter (Figure 3-3). The front end of the propeller is the end that faces the boat. As the propeller spins, water accelerates through it, creating a jet stream of higher-velocity water behind the propeller. This exiting water jet is smaller in diameter than the actual diameter of the propeller.

                              This water jet action of pulling water in and pushing it out at a higher velocity adds momentum to the water. This change in momentum or acceleration of the water results in a force which we can call thrust.
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                              • T.S.Davis
                                Fast Electric Addict!
                                • Oct 2009
                                • 6220

                                #30
                                Reading that makes it sound like neither exist independently. Thrust results from the sum of the two. Interesting.........
                                Noisy person

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