54
HUNT’S PROPELLER.
It is a safe principle to assume that the great Architect has adopted the very
best forms in all His works. The difficulty which we have to encounter in our
imitations arises generally either from our not understanding all the purposes
of the arrangement, or from our inability to apply them in the same way, or
give them the same properties. Thus the propelling effort of the fish is given
out by an alternating action, and a form similar to his tail may not be equally
well adapted to rotatory motion. The fish is also endowed with life, and his tail
is elastic, so that he suits it to the motion of the fluid in such a manner that
the form may lose its best properties if not thus regulated and changed at the
will of the animal.
We have only said thus much to show how difficult it is to form a judgment
on any thing which has not been practically proved. Messrs. Rennie, however,
have received an order to fit a vessel for the Admiralty, and this propeller will
then be fairly tried, and, if all the rest of the details be carried out with their
usual skill, we have little doubt of its entire efficacy.
hunt’s propeller.
This invention is shown at figs. 47 and 48. It consists of a number of vanes
aaaa attached to the nave b, and will be readily understood by the diagrams.
There is a novelty in the method of combining the rudder and propeller in
Fig. 47.