Surface drive / prop pocket
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- scot
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- Joined: Oct 3rd, '06, 09:47
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Surface drive / prop pocket
Here's an interesting project. The guy built a 38ft Carolina style boat and incorporated a custom built surface drive unit into a pocket. Engine is single Cummins 450C. Not a Bertram but a neat looking ride and the drive line engineering is certainly unique. The boat has sopme interesting shallow water capacity. He says cruise is around 19kts and WOT is 24kts, not to bad for a 38ft boat with one engine.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U60rx06Dmtk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U60rx06Dmtk
Scot
1969 Bertram 25 "Roly Poly"
she'll float one of these days.. no really it will :-0
1969 Bertram 25 "Roly Poly"
she'll float one of these days.. no really it will :-0
- In Memory of Vicroy
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- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
It never stops amazing me how people can try to re-invent the wheel.....bet the seals in that surface drive will last a week, even if the dawg don't fall in the prop. I've been to outdrives a few times over the years, and the old tried and true straight shaft with nothing but a strut and cutless bearing and a prop is the best ever. No drive trains with oil seals underwater is the way to go. It's a "duhhhhh" thing, my frens.
UV
UV
Scot,
To me there is no reason for a 24kn boat to have a surface drive.
Most conventional drives top out at 39kn or so due to drag, (imho), unless you are......can't remember his name "That's My Hon" 1980s Palm Beach 55kn until Jack Nicklaus bought it and threw out the MTUs and put in another cabin. The designer had US Navy connections and used air induction on the props apart from other hull refinements.
Also, and this is really important, there is no need for surface drives to be articulated. Betty Cook's team pioneered that type and everyone followed but you can have fixed shaft, (ie standard installation), surfacing propellors, with the exhaust dumping directly on top for low rev acceleration, developed by Sonny Levi originally and perfected by Dave Warren. I have driven them, they work. Conventional drives on the exact same 77ft hull and same 1150hp engines 32kn, fixed surface drives 38kn.
It is a business waiting to happen.
Nic
To me there is no reason for a 24kn boat to have a surface drive.
Most conventional drives top out at 39kn or so due to drag, (imho), unless you are......can't remember his name "That's My Hon" 1980s Palm Beach 55kn until Jack Nicklaus bought it and threw out the MTUs and put in another cabin. The designer had US Navy connections and used air induction on the props apart from other hull refinements.
Also, and this is really important, there is no need for surface drives to be articulated. Betty Cook's team pioneered that type and everyone followed but you can have fixed shaft, (ie standard installation), surfacing propellors, with the exhaust dumping directly on top for low rev acceleration, developed by Sonny Levi originally and perfected by Dave Warren. I have driven them, they work. Conventional drives on the exact same 77ft hull and same 1150hp engines 32kn, fixed surface drives 38kn.
It is a business waiting to happen.
Nic
Hull No. 330 1963 SF "Tennessee"
I think the best reason for that guy to have a surface drive is because he wants one. Makes him happy and if he don't make Chop Suey with that pooch its cool with me.
I kind of like the drive articulating...put a bowl over it when its up and you got one hell of a blender. Just need the fancy umbrellas and your good to go.
UV, if everbody stayed with the tried and true we'd all be touting the benefits of our 31 Bertram sailboats, paddlewheel boats, steam engine boats etc. Gotta look forward...
That said...I ain't saving up for one just yet.
I kind of like the drive articulating...put a bowl over it when its up and you got one hell of a blender. Just need the fancy umbrellas and your good to go.
UV, if everbody stayed with the tried and true we'd all be touting the benefits of our 31 Bertram sailboats, paddlewheel boats, steam engine boats etc. Gotta look forward...
That said...I ain't saving up for one just yet.
- In Memory of Vicroy
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- Posts: 2340
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
- scot
- Senior Member
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- Joined: Oct 3rd, '06, 09:47
- Location: Hurricane Alley, Texas
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Nic,
I think the point the designer intended is 2 fold, first and foremost is draft and second is backing down with a single screw boat. As a general rule singles just won't go in a straight line backwards, it can be hair raising to say the least. He says it has 28 degrees movement either way and the boat is extremely easy to handle in reverse.
Plus I'm sure he can blow a really nice rooster tail behind the boat if he were so inclined.
It's an interesting boat and no small engineering challenge. Even if I wouldn't do it I still appreciate the guy's imagination and persistance.
If he likes the dawg he needs to put it on a rope, what a mess that would make!
I think the point the designer intended is 2 fold, first and foremost is draft and second is backing down with a single screw boat. As a general rule singles just won't go in a straight line backwards, it can be hair raising to say the least. He says it has 28 degrees movement either way and the boat is extremely easy to handle in reverse.
Plus I'm sure he can blow a really nice rooster tail behind the boat if he were so inclined.
It's an interesting boat and no small engineering challenge. Even if I wouldn't do it I still appreciate the guy's imagination and persistance.
If he likes the dawg he needs to put it on a rope, what a mess that would make!
Scot
1969 Bertram 25 "Roly Poly"
she'll float one of these days.. no really it will :-0
1969 Bertram 25 "Roly Poly"
she'll float one of these days.. no really it will :-0
I forgot about that system UV, I would like to recant my statement as you are truly ahead of your time with that design. Wait and see...one day some huge conglomerate will see the genius in the design and give it a whirl, maybe the next step in the Newly Improved Bertram Empire, perhaps it will be seen on the next 63 footer, seems to have everything else...Vicroy wrote:Well, the Grosbeak Propulsion System never really took off......but it's still out there.
UV
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