13" × 17" Pervane Özellikleri

Adım oranı 1.31: 1.000–4.000 d/d'de teorik hız

Overview

A 13-inch diameter by 17-inch pitch propeller produces a pitch-to-diameter ratio of 1.31, which falls into the highly-geared / over-pitched bracket. The diameter sets the disc area that converts engine torque into thrust, while the pitch sets the theoretical distance the propeller advances per revolution. At 2,500 RPM through a 1.5:1 gearbox this combination posts a theoretical no-slip speed of 23.3 knots; at the 4,000 RPM upper trace the same prop reaches 37.3 knots, with real-world slip pulling those numbers down by 10–20 percent depending on hull loading and bottom condition.

Pervane özellikleri

Çap13"
Hatve17"
Hatve oranı1.31

Devire göre teorik hız

dev/dakHız (kayma %0)Hız (kayma %15)
1,0009.37.9
1,50014.011.9
2,00018.715.9
2,50023.319.8
3,00028.023.8
3,50032.627.7
4,00037.331.7

Typical applications

The 13"×17" size is most commonly fitted to family runabouts, walkarounds, and 75–150 hp center consoles, where the highly-geared / over-pitched pitch profile matches the planing performance window. Boats inside this class generally cruise between 23.3 and 37.3 knots on the speed chart above. High-RPM, high-pitch combinations are characteristic of light, planing hulls and performance fishing rigs. If your boat tops out far below the 37.3-knot theoretical figure, the propeller is over-pitched for your loaded weight and slip will climb toward the 15-percent column; if you over-rev past the engine's WOT range, the propeller is under-pitched and you should step up one or two inches of pitch.

Compared with adjacent sizes

Holding diameter at 13" and dropping pitch by two inches yields a lower top speed but quicker hole-shot and better load-carrying behaviour, which is why 13"×15" propellers are popular for heavy or family-loaded boats. Raising pitch by two inches to 13"×19" trades acceleration for roughly 2.7 knots of additional theoretical speed at the same RPM. Holding pitch at 17" and changing diameter shifts thrust area: a 12"×17" prop spins up easier on small engines, while 14"×17" needs a stiffer driveline but bites harder under load.

Sizing notes and assumptions

The speed table assumes a 1.5:1 gear reduction and the standard propulsion identity (pitch × RPM) ÷ (gear ratio × 1,215.2) to convert inches-per-minute into knots. Slip estimates of 0 percent (theoretical) and 15 percent (realistic cruising) bracket most clean-bottom planing hulls; expect higher slip on displacement vessels, fouled bottoms, or when towing. Always confirm propeller choice against the engine manufacturer's recommended WOT RPM window — landing inside the band protects the powerhead from lugging or over-revving and is the single biggest factor in long-term engine life.