Making a Fast Lego Boat 3/3 - underwater propellers

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024
  • Building a fast Lego motorboat with two submerged Lego propellers. Only Lego parts are used, except for a BuWizz 3.0 battery box. Enjoy!
    Battery box: BuWizz 3.0 Pro buwizz.com/sho...
    Motors: 2x Lego Buggy motor 5292c01 www.bricklink....
    Propellers: 2x Lego Propeller 2 Blade Twisted 4745 www.bricklink....
    Propeller attachment: double-sided tape rolled on a Lego axle
    Hull: Lego Hull Giant Bow 4245c01 www.bricklink....
    More details in my blog, including a part list and 3D model for the motorboat:
    brickexperimen...

Komentáře • 346

  • @BrickExperimentChannel
    @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 25 dny +68

    You can read more details and download partlists and 3D models for the three boats here:
    brickexperimentchannel.wordpress.com/fast-rc-lego-boats-blog-post-series/

    • @bobstr6224
      @bobstr6224 Před 25 dny +11

      Are you going to fix your paddlewheel ship by stopping the splashback slowing the boat down? As in the tubs over the paddles were acting as brakes

    • @-_._._-
      @-_._._- Před 25 dny +1

      You're the same person who runs Brick Bending aren't you? I noticed the two uploads within 10 minutes of each other, this video and the brick bending one.

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 25 dny +20

      @@bobstr6224 Not for now. I acknowledge the splash guards could be improved as you said.

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 25 dny +20

      @@-_._._- No. This is the only YT channel I have.

    • @Doomcio
      @Doomcio Před 25 dny +3

      I love your videos! Please don't change anything

  • @moon_bandage
    @moon_bandage Před 25 dny +300

    Would've been interested to see you try out a rudder instead of using engine power to steer!
    Loved the video

    • @ProeliatorDeus
      @ProeliatorDeus Před 25 dny +12

      Definitely would have allowed him to apply some "trim", especially at WOT.

    • @adamoliver82
      @adamoliver82 Před 24 dny +5

      Definitely would be interesting but doesn't using engine power alone for steering across the board make for a fairer test?

    • @Number1Irishlad
      @Number1Irishlad Před 21 dnem +3

      @@adamoliver82 I would argue he should have used a rudder across the board at the start. however, that would require him to start everything ALL over again, so for this it's probably okay there's not rudder

    • @JeremyMcCrearyTechnicalLEGO
      @JeremyMcCrearyTechnicalLEGO Před 15 dny +1

      @@ProeliatorDeus From experience with LEGO powerboats like this, I can tell you that a rudder would have increased both appendage drag and skin drag, the latter by increasing draft through the addition of non-propulsive weight. And that added drag would have reduced top speed Plus, rudders are poor at steering at low speed and in reverse. Twin-screw steering via differential power to the drive motors is much more effective in LEGO boats.

  • @PureRushXevus
    @PureRushXevus Před 25 dny +428

    he's preparing for a naval invasion, quickly! build the lego sea mines

    • @evergreengaming2.053
      @evergreengaming2.053 Před 25 dny +11

      Yeaaaah! Prepare the sea mines. And make them magnetic too.

    • @Wolang13
      @Wolang13 Před 25 dny +36

      a man has fallen into the river in Lego City! Build the SEA MINES!

    • @stevenstice6683
      @stevenstice6683 Před 25 dny +28

      ​@@Wolang13*HEY!*

    • @PureRushXevus
      @PureRushXevus Před 24 dny +4

      @@stevenstice6683 that's what I was going for xD

    • @nemesis7774
      @nemesis7774 Před 24 dny +5

      Build the lego submarine to torpedo the fast lego boat !

  • @AvatarNeo
    @AvatarNeo Před 25 dny +366

    Not gonna lie, that was one fast Lego boat

    • @DashzRight
      @DashzRight Před 25 dny +2

      5kmh is slow af for an rc boat 😂

    • @ionymous6733
      @ionymous6733 Před 25 dny +8

      I'm going to lie, that was one slow Lego boat

    • @N.P.T.F.Cxd71
      @N.P.T.F.Cxd71 Před 25 dny

      You record the sound nyyyyyooooommmmmmmm in the boat and go for a ride👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

    • @JackVermicelli
      @JackVermicelli Před 25 dny +9

      Why would this be something it would cross anyone's mind that it would be lied about?

    • @ellenwang239
      @ellenwang239 Před 23 dny +1

      How about a fastest Lego train?

  • @happyhelpfulhoovy
    @happyhelpfulhoovy Před 25 dny +104

    Similar to RCTestFlight's findings on his fan-made boat propeller challenge: The goal for fastest boat actually ends up finding the correct matching propeller type for your motor and power configuration. Since you have 2A and 12V available for each motor, the propeller must not be more powerful than 24W. Plus the RPM has to match up so the tip speed is not too great. The smaller propeller means a lower tip speed ratio + less energy spent just to rotate the mass vs a larger prop. The greater pitch of C offsets the lower diameter and number of blades, which makes it the best prop for the configuration. Also if you were to use a more powerful motor, there comes a point where a larger diameter at lower RPM is better, but for small scale, what you've found will generally hold true!

    • @coolcat498
      @coolcat498 Před 25 dny +6

      He's probably better off 3d printing such propeller given the limitations if Lego parts.
      Also rctestflight's series was so interesting to watch!

    • @ikbendusan
      @ikbendusan Před 24 dny +5

      what you are describing is the mechanical equivalent of impedance matching; you are tuning the load (propeller) to the source (motor) for maximum power transfer at a certain frequency (rpm)

    • @Kleenoox
      @Kleenoox Před 18 dny

      the video was good and that's all that matters so go further to annoy other people

  • @Valonia_Nightingale
    @Valonia_Nightingale Před 25 dny +86

    Love the 3-Part Fast Lego Boat series 😯
    Would love to see an amphibious Lego build that can seamlessly traverse both land and water.

  • @TheGahta
    @TheGahta Před 25 dny +177

    5:14 the two grey sockets look like totems 😂

    • @evergreengaming2.053
      @evergreengaming2.053 Před 25 dny +8

      OH LOL, I DIDN'T EVEN NOTICE THAT!

    • @bastian6173
      @bastian6173 Před 25 dny +6

      @@evergreengaming2.053 Me neither. OP has good eyesight and hi IQ. I think he may be the chosen one. All hail thegahta!

    • @egorsolovyov3322
      @egorsolovyov3322 Před 24 dny

      like lego indiana jhones the original adventure videogame

  • @wobblysauce
    @wobblysauce Před 25 dny +111

    Twin motor, you can get one to run in reverse so you can use the same prop for rotation and normally better control/no need for corrections. Both spin to the middle or outside, the best variance can depend on hull type... but at the small scale, I am unsure.

    • @Leroys_Stuff
      @Leroys_Stuff Před 25 dny +1

      I was just gonna say that

    • @joneydew4739
      @joneydew4739 Před 25 dny +41

      That requires an inverted prop, which Lego doesn't make.

    • @Simplebutsandy
      @Simplebutsandy Před 25 dny +3

      @@joneydew4739 An idler gear would have done the job easily enough.

    • @wobblysauce
      @wobblysauce Před 25 dny +2

      The inverted prop is only if you run the engine in the same direction, as these are electric it is just a wire swap and it doesn't care.

    • @heftig0
      @heftig0 Před 25 dny +36

      @@wobblysauce No, just reversing the engine would also reverse the thrust. You need to have a mirrored prop *and* spin it the other way around.

  • @RequiemAeterman
    @RequiemAeterman Před 25 dny +57

    I suspect we'll get 4/3 next week for a caterpillar drive. :D

  • @uwainium
    @uwainium Před 25 dny +60

    I love these videos, my only critique is that picking the best prop for example might be dependent on the gear ratio and not testing the full matrix (as far as I can tell) irks me haha

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 25 dny +124

      All props were tested with multiple gear ratios to find the best one. I left those tests out of the video, because they are a bit boring to watch. You can read the results here:
      brickexperimentchannel.wordpress.com/2024/08/17/fast-rc-lego-boats-motorboat-with-underwater-propellers-7-8/

    • @benjaminrogers9848
      @benjaminrogers9848 Před 25 dny +4

      ​@@BrickExperimentChannel Nice!

    • @uwainium
      @uwainium Před 25 dny +26

      @@BrickExperimentChannel oh my god this is exactly what I wanted haha thats AWESOME

    • @mingyi456
      @mingyi456 Před 25 dny

      @@BrickExperimentChannel What about the propeller type selection affecting the optimal vertical position and propeller pitch? Annoyingly, that would have been a nightmare to test.

    • @unixnut
      @unixnut Před 22 dny +1

      ​@@BrickExperimentChannel god I love science

  • @marinesciencedude
    @marinesciencedude Před 25 dny +12

    So the 'final' comparison is
    top speed: airboat 5.0 km/h, paddle wheel 3.9 km/h, underwater propellers 5.3 km/h
    approx. journey time (final time visible before overlay disappears): airboat 04:54, paddle wheels 04:53, underwater propellers 04:29
    comparing paddle wheel to airboat is a matter of the compromise between speed and steering (we can basically take them to be identical in journey time), but the advantages of underwater propellers do make a proper improvement against both in real-world tests.

    • @ivan-r_
      @ivan-r_ Před 24 dny

      In the experiment, the implementation of the paddle wheel has a fundamental design error, due to which it turned out to be noticeably less efficient than it should have been.

    • @scose
      @scose Před 24 dny

      It's surprising how close they all were

  • @jussitoivanen2667
    @jussitoivanen2667 Před 25 dny +13

    Extra challenge: could you get any of the used hulls planing? With any prop tech.

    • @GoldenCroc
      @GoldenCroc Před 24 dny

      This one is almost there as can be seen in the video. Very close. And when he is testing the RC one (I guess thats what it is) at the end of the video, it looks to be on plane to me.

  • @CrazyChemistPL
    @CrazyChemistPL Před 25 dny +10

    The only issue I see is the elevated position of the engines. Generally the lower the better for stability. I guess keeping them higher up helps with keeping them dry however.

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 25 dny +11

      True. The motors should be in a lower position. I just couldn't find a better build with the gears and all.

    • @omridoren
      @omridoren Před 25 dny +1

      ​@BrickExperimentChannel what about the most elevated vertical position with a -5 degrees kick? I think it could be better

    • @Inferno_407
      @Inferno_407 Před 25 dny +1

      The 1:5 planetary gear hub could possibly help with that, with a slight reduction to make it run at optimal speed

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 15 dny +1

      @omridoren I think you're right. Negative trim moves the prop a bit lower, allowing a higher leg position to reduce drag. Kind of micro-optimization, but still better at least in theory.

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 15 dny +1

      @Inferno_407 The gear hub (46490c01) is very compact and could help lowering the motor. But it is inefficient. I have a few of those hubs, and when you turn them with your fingers you can feel the resistance. The hub is full of thick grease or something. They are useful for turning truck wheels, but not 2000 RPM propellers.

  • @Marcara081
    @Marcara081 Před 25 dny +10

    One of these days I want you to list, 'mechanically accelerating projectile' as one of the builds and then just throw it as hard as you can.

    • @scose
      @scose Před 24 dny +1

      that would be cool - gotta make some constraints on the energy source

  • @LegoAutoTech
    @LegoAutoTech Před 23 dny +2

    2:33 I didn't think it could run that fast without sinking

  • @sparkoflife2937
    @sparkoflife2937 Před 5 dny +1

    What is that adorable little camera visible on the boat watching the captain

  • @heruhcanedean
    @heruhcanedean Před 25 dny +6

    The best prop I've found is using about 15 lego pieces.
    You need 2 of the 4 pegs with perpendicular center cross , 4 of the single pin with pin hole (the black ones from your motor mount.) And 8 1x5 technic beams held together with long pins and tied together with string when built. You can build them mirrored of each other super easy. They work great in reverse too.

    • @acomingextinction
      @acomingextinction Před 23 dny

      are there any photos online? i'm a smoothbrain.

    • @heruhcanedean
      @heruhcanedean Před 23 dny +1

      @@acomingextinction Not that I know of. I thought of it for my own boats.
      I might do you better than a picture, a little later I might make a quick video just showing my prop motor.
      Just have to use my own smooth brain to figure out how to control and film with the same phone. If I can't figure it out I'll make a video without controlling it.
      But I just got off work, so I'm going to relax for a little bit first.

    • @heruhcanedean
      @heruhcanedean Před 23 dny +1

      @@acomingextinction I couldn't figure out how to control the motor using BrickController 2 and also film with my phone.
      I'm posting a 8 second video that shows enough to be able to get ideas, maybe even copy my design. It features a crow calling in the background and my barn cat meowing at the end.
      I even show my gear ratio to make it have a nice turning angle, going full 90 degree makes it not turn very good, this turn angle lets the boat spin in circles.

  • @eos_the_goenner6198
    @eos_the_goenner6198 Před 25 dny +8

    When you have more than one prop, not even motor, you always want them to spin in opposite directions to cancel out gyroscopic processions... With the smaller props it's not as noticeable but having them spin the same direction will always introduce a little bit of side drift and roll force on the boat
    (had to learn that for my sport boating license)

    • @clapanse
      @clapanse Před 25 dny +1

      Ideally, sure, but if you have them spin the same direction, you can have identical engines, gearboxes, and props on both, and the part commonality often wins over the slight performance benefit in real designs.

    • @OlEgSaS32
      @OlEgSaS32 Před 25 dny

      i think that turned out to be the case with prop E when they were both spinning in the same direction and messed things up

  • @peterthepanda
    @peterthepanda Před 25 dny +30

    His controller is probably better than the one used in that submersible. 😂
    Guess they should have used a Playstation controller instead. 😂

    • @MrTefe
      @MrTefe Před 25 dny +13

      Wasnt the controllers fault that it imploded
      saying it was the controller is like saying it was because of the t-shirt one of the guys were wearing

    • @randomname4726
      @randomname4726 Před 25 dny +3

      ​@@MrTefelol great analogy.

    • @leboxdude1252
      @leboxdude1252 Před 17 dny

      ​@@MrTefe but the controller did die

    • @MrTefe
      @MrTefe Před 17 dny

      @@leboxdude1252 Yea no fucking shit take a controller to the titanic and make it explode with the sub its in. Did you think it would survive that?

  • @jackjorgensen1440
    @jackjorgensen1440 Před 25 dny +9

    Never have I ever clicked on a video so fast. Friggen love this channel

  • @Dan-vq4pz
    @Dan-vq4pz Před 25 dny +2

    Bravo! It's crazy how fast the motors drain that battery pack

  • @chasepatterson972
    @chasepatterson972 Před 18 dny

    watching that boat scoot was the funniest thing I've seen all day thank you

  • @Lynxlecanadien-if5my
    @Lynxlecanadien-if5my Před 25 dny +1

    you’re the best lego youtubeur of the time ❤

  • @wolf79wolf79
    @wolf79wolf79 Před 10 dny

    Cool. On the river clip I expected turning the engine sound into a melody, sort of the water pumps video ending. But this epilogue was a surprise as well.

  • @wojciechwilimowski985
    @wojciechwilimowski985 Před 24 dny

    Propeller A brings so much nostalgia, all the cool underwater themed sets had it

  • @meditation-q4n
    @meditation-q4n Před 25 dny +1

    These videos are satisfying

  • @spyshark_5002
    @spyshark_5002 Před 25 dny +7

    Is it possible to make it air piston powered?

  • @crazycjk
    @crazycjk Před 25 dny +3

    Interesting that the best trim level was a minus? Which unless I'm very much mistaken, is the opposite to real planing hull boats which run a positive trim angle. I wonder why? Maybe the lego hull becomes unstable because it's so light, therefore it being advantageous to keep the nose down? Likewise with the battery position. Intriguing

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 25 dny +10

      I wondered that too. My guess is that the boat is too back-heavy. Negative trim makes is more level. If the motors were located at the front, making the boat front-heavy, then a positive trim would have been the fastest option, I think.

    • @Nacho_Cheese_Doritos
      @Nacho_Cheese_Doritos Před 25 dny

      @@BrickExperimentChannelhai

  • @wawi42
    @wawi42 Před 24 dny +2

    Next video: Can I make a lego hydrofoil?

  • @Distraction_XP
    @Distraction_XP Před 25 dny +1

    The long awaited trilogy is complete

  • @abdulhossain8816
    @abdulhossain8816 Před 13 dny

    Can we give this channel the best lego channel award already.
    Also, if anyone asks why we use underwater props instead of air props or paddles, show them these last three videos. Higher speed as well as higher maneuverablility while reducing risk of unnecessary injuries to the users.

  • @mandyay7765
    @mandyay7765 Před 15 dny

    I love the building sound ASMR

  • @Hennu_TRM
    @Hennu_TRM Před 25 dny +1

    This series is so good! Always stoked for the long journey.

  • @rarityadf11f
    @rarityadf11f Před 25 dny +2

    compared with the previous version, which one is the best propulsion?

  • @christophalexander4542
    @christophalexander4542 Před 25 dny +1

    As great as the recent videos are, I have to say I miss the music during the field tests. You always had a good choice of relaxing music for them.

  • @HunterJE
    @HunterJE Před 25 dny +2

    I notice that for the sea trials the battery was moved aft slightly from the position picked as best in the pool, I wonder if that was a trade-off to reduce the chance of it taking a wave or getting knocked off in a collision with an obstacle, or if there was some off-camera fiddling that found that was actually better after the changes to other factors like prop depth and trim, or if it was to compensate for how the cameras affected the weight and balance, or some combination of factors?

    • @HunterJE
      @HunterJE Před 25 dny

      Also wonder if additional ballast besides the motors and batteries could further optimize some of these designs? Though at that point might need to start from theory rather than just exhaustively testing, since the options for both amount and position of the ballast opens up a LOT of possibility space...

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 25 dny +3

      Just because the battery blocks the view for the onboard camera. The video footage looks nicer this way IMO, even though the boat is a bit slower. The two onboard-cameras and minifig slow down the boat further and make it too back-heavy.

    • @HunterJE
      @HunterJE Před 25 dny

      @@BrickExperimentChannel Ahh that makes sense. I've loved this series, by the way, thanks!

  • @TehNoobiness
    @TehNoobiness Před 23 dny

    I would've liked to see a remake of Propeller E with either an inverted version of Prop E or some kinda different propeller arrangement, to allow use of two Prop Es without the rolling issue.

  • @louislesch3878
    @louislesch3878 Před 5 dny

    You should try putting two hull G’s tail to tail or even farther apart with tape if you feel that it’s allowed because the top speed of a non-planing boat is a function of its waterline length.

  • @REOBrickfilm
    @REOBrickfilm Před 22 dny

    cool as always

  • @SidusBrist
    @SidusBrist Před 23 dny

    This is probably the quickest but is clearly the less stable and constantly needs direction tweaking:)
    But maybe with a rudder or something similar would be more stable.

  • @adamoliver82
    @adamoliver82 Před 24 dny

    This has been a great little series. Genuinely excited to see what happens here.

  • @mattevans4377
    @mattevans4377 Před 22 dny

    Nice to see this actually be faster than part 1, unlike part 2

  • @JohnEdwa
    @JohnEdwa Před 24 dny

    For a 4th boat, you could try making one that has a single motor and uses a rudder to steer. Hull C with the cutout could work for that rather well.

  • @bleudie173
    @bleudie173 Před 18 dny +1

    Theres also gonna be a lot of variation of the speeds and props based on rpm. Try all the props again at like 5 different rpms.

  • @benderrodriguez5296
    @benderrodriguez5296 Před 24 dny

    I learn so much from this channel! 🙏🙏🙏

  • @ColeSpolaric
    @ColeSpolaric Před 24 dny

    That's the most stable one I've seen you do yet

  • @lotus2647
    @lotus2647 Před 24 dny

    I’ve seen some fast Lego boats in my life, this is certainly one of them

  • @Jareyousure
    @Jareyousure Před 24 dny

    all the propellers look so cute!

  • @PhilmoreJenkins
    @PhilmoreJenkins Před 24 dny

    It even gets up on plane! Sweet

  • @LegoBoomSG
    @LegoBoomSG Před 23 dny

    youre so enthusiastic with lego, love your video

  • @chriscollins9877
    @chriscollins9877 Před 23 dny

    Great use of the scientific method, kids- this is how discovery is achieved!

  • @fogter2678
    @fogter2678 Před 23 dny

    best series on youtube so far

  • @erinkarp
    @erinkarp Před 22 dny

    This is so much faster, wow!

  • @nadam1997
    @nadam1997 Před 24 dny

    Wow! Way better format than the first two of this series in my opinion. Amazing work as always!

  • @FakeJeep
    @FakeJeep Před 24 dny

    Wasn't expecting the boatcam... that was awesome.

  • @ristopoho824
    @ristopoho824 Před 24 dny

    Lego really should make opposite handed versions for the propellers.

  • @kaelananderson9237
    @kaelananderson9237 Před 24 dny +2

    I feel like Hull B got sold short, as it's practically begging to be made into a catamaran. I'd love to see it re-tested with the middle segments removed and the outer ones bridged over the waterline. Unless that configuration isn't buoyant enough to support the weight of the powertrain?

  • @grovecitysirens_GCS
    @grovecitysirens_GCS Před 24 dny

    I really do appreciate your content, i would like to see you try to make a siren out of lego

  • @AEasyButton
    @AEasyButton Před 24 dny

    it would be super cool if you could mess around with doing some sort of impeler jet drive

  • @seabassmastermatt80
    @seabassmastermatt80 Před 25 dny

    Wow dude that's SO manoeuvrable too!! 👌🏼

  • @WillowEpp
    @WillowEpp Před 21 dnem

    Your videos always kinda make me want to buy a bunch of lego and iterate on your findings...

  • @JeremyMcCrearyTechnicalLEGO

    Very impressive test matrix and result! Keep up the great work!
    Made a lot of twin-screw LEGO powerboats ca. 2013-2015 - one of which won the BrickWorld boat drag race using a City Lines hull and your chosen 2-blade prop.
    Since you've already strayed from LEGO "purity" with the double-stick tape and lube, may I suggest for future testing:
    1. Sand the prop's slab blades into airfoll profiles with coarse to fine emery boards. Exact profile doesn't matter. HUGE boost in thrust! (Eventually went to counter-rotating hobby-shop RC boat props for another huge thrust boost with no prop walk.)
    2. Give the City Lines hull another try after fairing the keel recess with smooth tape. Much more favorable length/breadth ratio at the waterline.

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 16 dny

      Hey, that's so cool. I found your boat in the drag race video here czcams.com/video/Sxtq_2ZR9Wo/video.html
      Thanks for the suggestions. Both are easy modifications to try out. Could you expand on the "favorable length/breadth ratio"? I understand the tape modification will raise the hull higher and reduce drag, but the length/width ratio is a new idea to me.

    • @JeremyMcCrearyTechnicalLEGO
      @JeremyMcCrearyTechnicalLEGO Před 16 dny +1

      @@BrickExperimentChannel What a blast from the past! If we'd been allowed to sand the prop blades into airfoils, we'd have left everyone else in the drag race far behind. We won partly on our ability to hold a straight course, but that worked against us in the slalom.
      Lenght/breadth (L/B) ratio at the waterline is the single most important hull metric when it comes to speed. The greater the L/B, the faster the boat for a given propulsion system. At the time, the City Lines hull had the highest L/B of any LEGO unitary hull capable of carrying 2 L or XL motors safely.
      Waterline lenth by itself is also important, and the longer the faster. City Lines hull was the longest then, too.
      You also want to minimize draft, and that means minimizing weight. That's why we kept coming back to rudderless twin-screw designs.
      You also want to minimize appendage drag, which means having the least possible plastic in the water besides the hull itself.
      The tape trick just covers up the recess in the bottom of the City Lines hull. Just a streamlining measure, but it makes a difference.

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 16 dny +1

      That makes sense. High L/B explains why the City Lines hull is so fast. It also explains why tankers and other ships in real life are made long and narrow to increase efficiency and save fuel.
      The Giant Lego hull, that I used in this last boat, was wider and shorter but still very fast. Maybe that is because the boat is starting to plane? As I understand it, the factors that affect speed change when the boat goes from displacement to planing mode.
      I put a link to your speedboat in my blog. That's an achievement to go 4.0 km/h with regular Lego rechargeable battery boxes.
      brickexperimentchannel.wordpress.com/2024/08/03/fast-rc-lego-boats-background-1-8/

    • @JeremyMcCrearyTechnicalLEGO
      @JeremyMcCrearyTechnicalLEGO Před 15 dny

      @@BrickExperimentChannel Yes, everything changes when a boat gets up on plane - and none of my boats ever got close with LEGO motors and batteries. In the displacement regime, waterline length determine "hull speed", beyond which the resistance/kg vs. speed curve turns sharply upward. Got some of my boats past this inflection, but never by much.

    • @JeremyMcCrearyTechnicalLEGO
      @JeremyMcCrearyTechnicalLEGO Před 15 dny

      @@BrickExperimentChannel Will check out your blog tonight. Thanks for linking my winning boat.

  • @kasperwinterhag
    @kasperwinterhag Před 23 dny

    Hull B withouth the two middle ones would be interesting. A real catamaran.

  • @WwZa7
    @WwZa7 Před 23 dny

    Interesting that none of these hulls had issues with spinning out of control, underwater propellers seem to be very stable.

  • @dinO-qk1pp
    @dinO-qk1pp Před 25 dny

    your underwater series are always the best

  • @MattTester
    @MattTester Před 25 dny

    This was a great series, would love to see more.

  • @ipullstuffapart
    @ipullstuffapart Před 2 dny

    The prop walk issue may only be a problem in static tests. It would be interesting to see those props with the walk issue tested in motion.

  • @Caligari87
    @Caligari87 Před 25 dny +1

    I would like the full river trips as a separate video without being sped up.

  • @GoldenCroc
    @GoldenCroc Před 24 dny

    It actually almost/sort of gets up on plane. Not bad!

  • @xxSgtXioXxx291
    @xxSgtXioXxx291 Před 24 dny

    I love for when he gives it full throttle

  • @TheOneTrueCaius
    @TheOneTrueCaius Před 24 dny

    Very cool. You should put a nug wrapped in plastic on the boat so the Lego man can live life on the edge.

  • @Thoofdecay
    @Thoofdecay Před 14 dny

    Amazing as always!

  • @charleshulsey3103
    @charleshulsey3103 Před 24 dny

    OMG I need LEGO boats now!!!
    😅

  • @Num_sebo_oq-to-fazeno
    @Num_sebo_oq-to-fazeno Před 25 dny +6

    Ok I didn't expect that 4:39

  • @nyananas20111
    @nyananas20111 Před 16 dny

    now i dare you to make a lego fast boat only powered by the inertia of a flywheel, no paddling, just pure inertia

  • @Piesolesy
    @Piesolesy Před 25 dny

    This channel is recording my dreams and posting them on youtube

  • @GabrielArmstrong124
    @GabrielArmstrong124 Před 7 dny +1

    3:50 i would put it back to 0 degrees because ive had boats and the higher the rpm the closer you want to be to 0 degrees for speed

  • @grapheneperovskite1428

    *I have an idea : if you make the hull waterproof, it will have less resistance !*

  • @calvincarr1347
    @calvincarr1347 Před 24 dny

    Very cool video! Nice work.

  • @ArchangelTirael
    @ArchangelTirael Před 25 dny +3

    By the way, which one of your three boats you tested recently was the easiest to control? It's quite hard to feel how controllable boats actually are through video.

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 25 dny +5

      The paddlewheel boat was the easiest because it goes straight at full speed and also turns quickly and accurately (stops when you want to) at slow speeds.
      The motorboat with underwater propellers was also easy to control at slow speeds but at full throttle, it veers right because the two CCW propellers tilt the hull. That makes it a bit more challenging.
      The airboat was the most difficult to control. It oversteers at turns and doesn't go straight easily. The controls are delayed, because you need to build RPM to get thrust. It feels like driving a car on ice.

    • @BenAlternate-zf9nr
      @BenAlternate-zf9nr Před 25 dny +1

      ​@@BrickExperimentChannelcould you put different trim angles on the left and right sides to counteract the tilt effect?

    • @BrickExperimentChannel
      @BrickExperimentChannel  Před 15 dny

      @BenAlternate-zf9nr Yeah, I think you could. That is a nice way to fix it. Another way to straighten the steering is 1) moving the propellers to the right or 2) limiting the max output to less than 100% on the left motor. I haven't tested anyone of those, so don't know which one is the most accurate, and works on both slow and fast speed.

    • @user-pf9rl5xo5y
      @user-pf9rl5xo5y Před 5 dny

      @@BrickExperimentChannel Have you considered adding a skeg to the keel? It's what greatly helps with steering stability in a real world applications. It won't necessarily add to the boat's draft, as it can compensate its height with more length. I understand why the keel shouldn't be added to an airboat but here it seams like a no-brainer for me.

  • @Michael.Werker
    @Michael.Werker Před 23 dny

    Maybe try a hydrofoil for more speed.
    The 'Zisch' boats from Felix Wankel could also be interesting.

  • @Gennady_Bruschenko
    @Gennady_Bruschenko Před 23 dny

    Большое спасибо за ваше творчество!
    Всем мир)

  • @SebastianWellsTL
    @SebastianWellsTL Před 24 dny +1

    At full throttle, the boat seems to drift toward the starboard side. The weight of the camera might be causing this. A counterweight may prevent this starboard drift.

    • @Henchman_Holding_Wrench
      @Henchman_Holding_Wrench Před 24 dny +1

      I was thinking that it might be the same torquing we saw from Prop E, the big yellow ones, but at smaller scale. So we see it add up over long distances. It was a little noticeable in the pool tests.

    • @SebastianWellsTL
      @SebastianWellsTL Před 22 dny

      @@Henchman_Holding_Wrench That's a good point!

  • @JoeOvercoat
    @JoeOvercoat Před 25 dny

    Very stable!

  • @GOAFPilotChannel
    @GOAFPilotChannel Před 24 dny +1

    without doing a full test matrix / DOE, how do you know you ended up with the optimal config? A previous hull might have been better with a different weight distribution, etc.

  • @Decayrate-of-Ravn-Rike

    real world test location seems very close to home :P

  • @MalloonTarka
    @MalloonTarka Před 23 dny

    I always wonder if different propulsion and hull combinations would turn out to be faster. After all, its not a given that the best screw for one boat is the best screw for another.

  • @AiOinc1
    @AiOinc1 Před 24 dny

    Now that you have some props, you can make some impellers and build some jets!
    On the other hand, I can see you have some extra room there, why not more motors?

  • @MaxSolar-dd5wq
    @MaxSolar-dd5wq Před 23 dny

    Surprisingly that boat is faster than the Mayflower

  • @RB-us6tf
    @RB-us6tf Před 25 dny

    This was great, thank you!

  • @DaniilYUMA
    @DaniilYUMA Před 17 dny

    5:26 and 6:00 It looked very much like real Yamaha engines.😊

  • @iamdmc
    @iamdmc Před 24 dny

    Contra-rotating propellers with fewer wide-flat blades are almost always better in the water

  • @louislesch3878
    @louislesch3878 Před 5 dny

    Now a rocket powered Lego boat!

  • @TomSedgman
    @TomSedgman Před 24 dny

    who'd have thought that the OG lego prop would be the most effective?!

  • @hiho9149
    @hiho9149 Před 22 dny

    You're always optimizing for the current configuration. You might have skipped some part combinations that would have performed a lot better with different configurations.

  • @MegawackyMax
    @MegawackyMax Před 25 dny

    Now that you built a working boat, would it be possible to load it with accesories to make it even more functional? Like a weapon (a controllable cannon, perhaps?), or a crane to fish treasure and salvage from the depts. Could the boat stay afloat while hauling cargo up? So many questions!

  • @techgirl517
    @techgirl517 Před 24 dny

    I love this channel

  • @DiyEcoProjects
    @DiyEcoProjects Před 25 dny

    Thats fun bro. Enjoyed this one. Like all the problem solving

  • @The-creator-of-good-videos-15

    What a speedy Lego boat! I guess. Nice. I guess.

  • @frankdebruin1694
    @frankdebruin1694 Před 8 dny

    Imagine walking through a forest and all of a sudden a (perfectly working) fast moving , selfmade Lego RC boat sailing by and nobody is to be seen 😂
    (PS: isn’t the non-lego propellor 40% faster than the lego version , not30%?)