Jeff Reardon
Well-known member
Since I haven't learned to scull yet, I want to pick up a pair of inexpensive rowing oars for my sculling boat. The oars I can afford come in standard 6 1/2, 7 and 7 1/2 foot lengths. (I have two different sculling oars, so I'm not asking about those until after I try them out.)
I've found a couple of formulas to compute the proper oar length for your boat, and all of them come out about mid way between 7' and 7 1/2'. The actual range was from 7.19 to 7.35. One of the formulas suggested rounding up
So, should I err on the short side or the long side? What I want is emergency propulsion if my kicker fails, and the ability to use the boat in a few areas that don't allow motors. (I'm assuming that the learning curve on actually sculling is slow enough that for this season I don't want to rely on my sculling skills in an emergency.) I'm not interested in joining the local crew team or winning the Head of the Charles Regatta, so, while I'd like an oar that can row efficiently, I don't need to squeeze every bit of rowing performance out of the boat.
So, given the statistics below, what length oars do the experts here recommend? I do not want to have to overlap the oars while rowing.
Boat length--15'5"
Max beam--52"
Oar lock to oar lock distance--48"
Height of oarlock above water--unknown, as I have not had the boat in the water yet. I'm guessing ~12 inches.
I've found a couple of formulas to compute the proper oar length for your boat, and all of them come out about mid way between 7' and 7 1/2'. The actual range was from 7.19 to 7.35. One of the formulas suggested rounding up
So, should I err on the short side or the long side? What I want is emergency propulsion if my kicker fails, and the ability to use the boat in a few areas that don't allow motors. (I'm assuming that the learning curve on actually sculling is slow enough that for this season I don't want to rely on my sculling skills in an emergency.) I'm not interested in joining the local crew team or winning the Head of the Charles Regatta, so, while I'd like an oar that can row efficiently, I don't need to squeeze every bit of rowing performance out of the boat.
So, given the statistics below, what length oars do the experts here recommend? I do not want to have to overlap the oars while rowing.
Boat length--15'5"
Max beam--52"
Oar lock to oar lock distance--48"
Height of oarlock above water--unknown, as I have not had the boat in the water yet. I'm guessing ~12 inches.