Propeller Injury Technical Papers & Articles
An Anotated Bibliography
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Propeller Guard Technical Papers and Articles
Note some videos and films are near the bottom of the page.
2008
- Wireless Revolution Extends to Lanyards. by Elizabeth Ellis. Soundings Trade Only. September
2008. Pgs. 31 and 64. Story of the origin and evolution of the Autotether wireless lanyard. How they
handled the power requirements and selected batteries to is emphasized.
- Characteristics and Mechanisms of Boat Propeller Injuries. S. Yu, YW SHen, AM Xue. Published in
Fa Yi Xue Za Zhi (Journal of Forensic Medicine a quarterly journal). Vol.24. No.1. Pgs 43-46. (2008).
Affiliated with the Huzhou Public Security Bureau. Huzhou 313000 China.
Article explores the differences between propeller injuries and corpse dismemberment
(how to tell if a body found in the water or on the beach was hit by a propeller or foul play).
100 autopsies of boat propeller injuries performed between 1994 and 2005 in Huzhou district, Zhejiang province
were studied for characteristics of the wounds, abrasions, fractures, and clothing. Those characteristics
were then compared with similar studies of corpse dismemberment. They found the wounds to be distinguishable
due to differences in the amount of force and recoil recoil force, and in differences mechanical cutting (propeller)
vs. using a sharp instrument. Those variables lead to different cross sectional wound characteristics. Note - the
article is in Chinese.
Huzhou district Zhejiang province borders the ocean about midway up China's coast. It is about twice the
size of Rhode Island with about twice as many people as well. They do not say how many propeller injuries
there were, but 100 were autopsied over a 12 year period.
- "Development of a Performance Test Protocol for Small Power Boats" by Richard Akers, Clifford
Goudey, and Robert McNeill (involved in verifying the USCG propeller guard test protocol) will be
giving a paper on the process at the
Chesapeake Power Boat
Symposium in Annapolis Maryland March 7th-8th, 2008.
- Wireless Cutoff Switch Offers Additional Safety for Boaters. Small Craft Advisory. NASBLA.
Jan-Feb 2008. Pg. 6.
Reviews Autotether, its inventors, inspiration, early development, and features.
- Prop Guards Not Required. by Elaine Dickinson. Boat U.S. Magazine. Jan. 2008. Pg. 46.
Reports on the USCG withdrawal of proposed rule making for propeller guards on houseboats. Includes
comments from Jeffrey Ludwig USCG, a discussion of the ongoing propeller guard performance standards
development project, a discussion of the cost benefits analysis and brief discussion of prop strike
statistics. The article mistakenly states "eight boaters were killed in motor or propeller strikes
in 2006" when referring to strikes by non-houseboat motorized vessels. The actual U.S. Coast Guard
report indicated 28 were killed. We will be contacting them about the error.
2007
- Propeller Guards Not Recommended on Recreational Houseboats. by John McKnight. Soundings Trade
Only online. 22 Oct. 2007. Briefly reviews the USCG withdrawal of the proposed rule. Includes references
to the NMMA and SBA working together on alternatives, and cites cost as one of the reasons for withdrawal.
- Slower Boat Speeds Reduce Risks
to Manatees. C. Scott Calleson and R. Kipp Frohlich. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission,
Imperiled Species Management Section. Published in Endangered Species Research. Vol.3. Pgs.295-304.
Published Online 18 Oct 2007. Addresses speed and propeller / boat impact injuries. Much is directly
transferable to people in the water. It also addresses blunt force trauma issues and reaction times
making it interesting to those studying near shore prop strikes of swimmers.
- Performance of Infrared
Systems in Swimmer Detection for Maritime Security. Keith Krapels, Ronald Diggers, Jose Garcia III.
Optics Express. Vol.15 No. 9. Pgs 12296-12305. Use of infrared sensors to detect people in the water
near vessels. Viewers looked at images (it was not an automatic decision making system).
- "Pushing a Safe Option" Army The Soldier's Newspaper (Australia) is a
letter discussing the
introduction of ring propellers (RingProp) on Army watercraft. It includes a discussion of Army propeller
accidents including one fatality and how the decision was made.
- "Bumping into People in the Water" by Ralp Lambrecht, Boat & Motor Dealer. April 2007. Pgs.6-8. Mr. Lambrecht briefly
responds to our continuing insistence that he correct his under
stating of annual propeller injury counts per the U.S. Coast Guard data in his November 2006 column in the same publication,
then goes on to praise a propeller guard (Pro-Pell) on a surf rescue boat in New Zealand, then discusses performance problems
with a guard he and Jim Wynne tested on a 50 mph boat about 18 years ago.
- Avoiding Propeller Strikes
Suffolk News-Herald (Virginia) 13 March 2007. Writer reports on ways to avoid propeller strikes after riding in and
out from a cruise ship in small boats. They came in on a "bumpy" ride and went back in 4 to 5 foot seas. He closes
with some suggestions from the recent U.S. Coast Guard Propeller Injury Awareness Brochure. (see below)
-
Forensic Methods For Characterizing Watercraft from Watercraft-Induced Wounds on the Florida Manatee (Trichechus
Manatus Latirostris). Sentiel A. Rommel, Alexander M. Costidis, Thomas D. Pitchford, Jessica D. Lightsey, Richard H.
Snyder (previously of Mercury Marine), and Elsa M. Haubold. Marine Mammal Science. Vol.23. No.1. Pgs.110-132. (January 2007).
Discusses how forensic examination the wounds can infer the size and pitch of the propeller (and thus the size of
the boat) that hit a manatee. As well as how to distinguish boat impact wounds from propeller wounds. These methods
would seemingly be of interest to those trying to similar things with human wounds.
- Follow Up Study of Hospital Treated Recreational Boating Injury. Prepared for Marine Safety Victoria (Australia)
by Monash University Accident Research Centre. Karen Ashby, Erin Cassell, and Melinda Conglu. January 2007. An extensive
survey of those in the hospital for boating injuries of all kinds. One interesting point on pdf page 44 (document pg 30)
is 67 percent of vessels involved in towed sports accidents (of all kinds) did not have propeller guarding (insinuating
the remaining 30 plus percent did).
- Evaluation of Propeller Cuts Documented in Right Whale
Necropsy Field No. GA 2006 025 by James L. Wood of Lumatrex. 16 Jan 2007. An analysis of propeller cuts to determine
the vessel and propeller that made them. Similar to the process used on manatees. Note - this author published a related
study in 2005.
2006
- Keeping Current on Kill-Switches.
BoatUS Foundation. November 2006.
Great article evaluates mechanical and virtual kill switches in on water tests.
- Vehicle
Backover Avoidance Technology Study. Report to Congress. National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration. U.S. Dept. of Transportation. November 2006.
It has a companion report titled, Experimental
Evaluation of the Performance of Available Backover Prevention Technologies. Sept 2006. DOT HS 810 634.
The associated DOT Docket (NHTSA-2006-25579-0005) contains video of some of the testing.
These are reports on possible use of devices to reduce vehicle backover accidents of children in driveways.
The technologies and methods may be of interest to those developing virtual propeller guards as
well as those working with similar visibility issues in houseboats and other larger vessels.
- The
Push to Reduce Propeller Strikes by Jim Flannery. Soundings Trade Only. July 2006. Discusses some of the new
technologies including Virtual Lifeline from MariTech and Mercury Marine's detection efforts.
It also includes some broad statistics for prop strikes by activity.
- Propeller Injury Awareness Brochure.
U.S. Coast Guard. 2006.
- Methods Used During Gross Necropsy to Determine WaterCraft-Related Mortality in the Florida Manatee
(Trichechus Manatus Latirostris). Jessica D. Lightsey, Sentiel A. Rommel, Alexander M. Costidis, and Thomas
D. Pitchford. Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. Vol. 37. No.3. (Sept. 2006). Pgs. 262-275. An
abstract is available online.
- Evaluation of Propeller Cuts Documented in
Right Whale Necropsy; Field No.: DVS 2006-04747. by James L. Wood. Lumatrex. 31 Aug 2006. Another prop cut
analysis paper.
- Analysis of Propeller Cuts Documented in Right Whale Necropsy" EgNEFL0602 by James L. Wood of
Lumatrex. 27 Jan 2006. Another prop cut analysis paper. He points out propeller diameters range from 3 to 5 percent of the
total length of a vessel depending on vessel type.
- "Prop Guards Are a Subject That Seems to Live Forever" by Ralph Lambrecht, Boat & Motor Dealer. Sept/Oct 2006.
Pgs. 6 & 8. Mr. Lambrecht reports "there is no question that a guard surrounding the propeller would mitigate these
injuries" referring to accidents when the boat is virtually standing still, or has just been put in gear or while people are
around the swim platform. He mentions the problems normally listed with traditional guards when underway at higher speeds
(performance, handling, fuel efficiency), grants possible use on slower moving vessels like non-planing houseboats, and
mentions some other approaches to the problem (kill switches, proximity devices on the operator and passengers, swim
ladder switches, swim ladder placement), and an upcoming round of Coast Guard tests. The article does greatly underestimate
the current accident stats, probably using Event 1 data only (see our Propeller Accident
Statistics page).
- "Industry Critics Say Kill Switch Rule is Overkill" by Melanie Winters, Soundings Trade Only. October 2006. Pgs. 52-53.
In an effort to reduce propeller strikes from circling, riderless boats after the operator has fallen overboard, the
U.S. Coast Guard is considering requiring the installation of an engine cutoff device (kill switch) on boats under 26 feet,
even though it is standard equipment on most boats of that size. The article discusses the tabling on a 2001 proposal to
require propeller guards due to a cost benefit analysis indicating there were not enough fatalities to justify the requirement
of guards per John McKnight of the NMMA, who also mentioned driveability issues. It also mentions related resolutions from NBSAC,
and the creation of a Product Interface Committee to address these issues by the ABYC, efforts by SPIN, and several other
points surrounding the use of propeller injury avoidance devices.
2005
- "Repeatability of Methods of Propeller Cut Analysis Using Photographs of Cuts and Scars on Carcasses of
Living Animals". James L. Wood. Wildlife Foundation of Florida. 12 December 2005. Florida Oceans Tag Grant
#DFO 0506-02. In efforts to determine the size and types of vessels involved in manatee propeller strikes, a
test was ran to determine if some high school students with minimal training could estimate the diameter and
number of blades of the propeller causing the injury from photographs of scars on the manatees. (this might
well also be applied to humans hit by unknown boats).
- Characteristing and Interpreting Watercraft-Related Wounds in Florida Manatees: A Retrospective Analysis of Florida
Manatee Mortality Data for Evidence of Deaths Attributable to (Very) Large Vessels, 1990-1999. Final Report to the United
States Fish and Wildlife Service, Jacksonville FL. by T.D Pitchford, S.A. Rommel and M.E. Pitchford. 2005. Another prop cut
analysis paper.
- "Designing an Intelligent Propeller Safety System" by Bram van der Vlist of Eindhoven University of Technology.
October 2005. Includes a literature review of ways to detect the presence of a human body, a survey of potential users,
graphics illustrating the ways people come in contact with a propeller, and a system utilizing a wearable "tag" to detect
if a person is in the water, how far they are from the propeller, and take appropriate action, as well as a discussion of
how the system should "look and feel". We are proud to have participated in this student project.
- "Prop of a Different Twist" DIY Boat Owner Magazine. 2005 #3 issue
reports on some performance, fuel efficiency and
"submerged object" testing of RingProp propellers. In Australia, they hit some sheep carcasses submerged in the water
with RingProp and conventional propellers at various speeds. Its a bit of a marketing article, but still includes some
good information.
- Australia's Workplace Health and Safety Amendment Regulation (1) 2005 - Regulatory Impact Statement for SL 2005
No. 70 is the official regulatory
impact statement for the proposed Propeller Guard regulations for commercial dive boats. See Adobe pages 45 to 49
and the entry below. The study reports changing propeller pitch and other features greatly reduced the drop in operating
efficiency of propeller guards. The study also puts forth the idea of installing the prop guard at the diving site
and leaving it off when running full throttle out to the site to maintain top speed and reduce fuel consumption.
- Regulatory Impact Statement of Proposed Regulation of Occupational Underwater Diving Work by the Queensland
Australian government dated July 2004 reports
on the impact of their proposal to require propeller guards on dive boats for commercial operations (harvest fishing,
underwater construction, etc). University of Queensland was engaged to "determine the extent of decreased fuel efficiency
various propeller guards have on different sized outboard engines. This data along with many other thoughts and
comments are presented, along with cost estimates. Most of the propeller guard related comments are on Adobe Acrobat
page numbers 34 to 37.
This is the study mentioned by RingProp in a 20 May 2004 document about the University of Queensland (Australia)
being commissioned by the Queensland government to commence trials of various propeller guards with the trials being
conducted off Stradbroke and Heron Islands.
- Drowning Prevention Strategy 26 Aug 2005, New Zealand.
Some of the types of agencies, methods and approaches might be useful in formulating a plan to reduce U.S. propeller
injuries.
- Management of Extremity Trauma and Related Infections Occurring in the Aquatic Environment. by Greer E. Noonburg MD.
Journal Amercian Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Vol.13 No.4. July/August 2005. Pgs. 243-253. Available from High Wire.
- Characteristics of Water Skiing-Related and Wakeboarding-Related Injuries Treated in Emergency Departments in the
United States, 2001-2003. by Sarah Grim Hostetler, Todd L. Hostetler, Gary A. Smith, and Huiyun Xiang. American Journal of
Sports Medicine. July 2005. Vol.33. Pgs. 1065-1070. AJSM provides an online
abstract.
- Preventing Boat Propeller Injuries
by Valeri Giles, published by ezinearticles.com 8 July 2005. This basic boating safety article also focuses on the safe
operation of Personal Water Craft (PWCs). It also mentions the interest of the National Children’s Center for Rural and
Agricultural Safety in this area.
- "The Safety Campaign for the Prevention of Boat and Propeller Accidents". by Sergio Discepolo and Manuela Bonacina,
Dan Europe Communications. Published in Alert Diver. 2nd Quarter 2005.
- Evaluation of USCG Cutter Point Francis Propeller Strike on Right
Whale Calf: Field Number : RKB-1424 by James L. Wood of Lumatrex. Another propeller cut analysis paper.
- NEIT for Right Whale Recovery Meeting Presentation
by James L. Wood of Lumatrex. 5 April 2005. Power Point Presentation. Summarizes two projects involving propeller cut
analysis.
- Proposal for the Preparation of a
Technical Report Documenting Methods of Propeller Cut Analysis Based on the Use of Photographs of Cuts and Scars
on Carcasses and Living Animals. by James L. Wood of Lumatrex. 3 April 2005.
- Evaluation of Propeller Strike on Right Whale 2425 off Cumberland
Island, Georgia on 10 March 2005. by James L. Wood of Lumatrex. Draft Dated 3 April 2005. An analysis of the
propeller cuts to determine the characteristics of the vessel, prop and situation that caused it, similar to that done on
manatees by others.
- Causes and Prevention of Boating Fatalities. Peter J. O'Connor and Nina O'Connor. Accident Analysis and Prevention. Vol.37. J
uly 2005. Pgs. 689-698. Article reports the investigation of 333 boating deaths in Australia from 1992-1998. Propeller deaths
are not specifically cited, but many of the methods and discussions will be helpful to to those analyzing boating accidents.
Available from Elsevier.
- "Stress" a radio segment aired on Radio Lab, a New York National Public Radio program, on 11 Feb 2005. The
program addresses the "stress" that occurs from being struck by a propeller by getting an individual to talk about
what it was like. The program is a bit irreverent at times, but the propeller injury segment is pretty "matter of fact".
Coby Hall (spelling uncertain) describes being hit by the propeller of a ski boat that seems to have been left slightly
in reverse. He was preparing to ski and it backed into him while the boat operator was tending to the ski rope.
The accident occured in Vermont on a July 4th weekend (year not certain). The actual audio of the interview is online
as part of the The episode titled "Stress".
It begins at about 5 minutes: 5 seconds on the timer and ends at about 12 minutes: 40 seconds giving it a run time
of about Seven and a half minutes. You may need to "scoot" your browser our of the way to see the audio timer,
then adjust it using the slider. The
online sound file is of excellent quality.
2004
- PropGuard. Propeller Magazine (New Zealand). June-July 2004.
Review of PropGuard built by Safe Marine Ltd. for outboards.
- Drowning,
Near-Drowning and Other Water-Related Injury: Literature Review and Analysis of National Injury Data. Report to Accident
Compensation Corporation. May 2004. New Zealand. Section 5.1.2 covers Propeller Injuries. It is on pages 41-43.
The report provides interesting statistics from several other studies.
- Scientific Evaluation of a Sediment Fill Technique for the Restoration of Motor Vessel Injuries in Seagrass Beds of the
Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Kamille K. Hammerstrom, W. Judson Kenworthy and Mark S. Fonseca. U.S. Dept of Commerce.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. National Ocean Service, National Center of Coastal Ocean Service, Center for
Coast Fisheries and Habitat Research. 13 pages. 2004. This report begins on Adobe Page count 34 of this
Seagrass report.
- Research Connections:
Growth and Innovation in New Zealand and an Institute of Technology May 2004. Page 11 (the last page) reports on a
"Aqua Guard: a Performance Propeller Guard " resulting from a previous project called Heat Stress Remedy. This project involves
a joint proposal for a Kevlar reinforced propeller guard for standard outboard motors (Mercury, Honda). It is a Technology
New Zealand project and an application is under development with Auckland University Dept of Engineering and Stainless Design
Ltd of Hamilton.
2003
- Historical
Evidence of Whale/Vessel Collisions in Hawaiian Waters (1975-Present). Marc Lammers, Adam Pack, Lisa Davis. OSI Techical Report
2003-01. August 19, 2003. Most of these collisions involve larger vessels and many resulted in propeller strike injuries to the whale.
- Fault Tree Analysis for Assessing Propeller Guard Injury Prevention Effectiveness. Tyler A. Kress and Reid L. Kress (USA).
Paper #387-022. Proceedings of the IASTED International Conference on Biomechanics. Rhodes, Greece. Jun 30 - July 2, 2003.
Paper was presented on July 1. Published by International Association of Science and Technology for Development. Focuses on
effectiveness of propeller guards by applying fault tree analysis techniques. Encourages further study to collect data on
injury severity and frequency.
- Safety First, Performance Last. Jeff Hemmel. Boating. Vol.76 No.5. (May 2003) Pg.142. Advises on selection and use of
propeller guards.
- Pandora's Box? By Michael Verdon. International Boat Industry. Feb.-Mar. 2003. Pgs. 19-20. Mr. Verdon follows up on the
Sprietsma vs. Mercury Marine case by interviewing representative of several firms, including Mercury Marine, the prosecuting
attorney, NMMA, Volvo Penta, and me. He also reviewed the existing Coast Guard regulations (or lack there of). I appreciate
his mention of our Virtual Propeller concept in the article as well as his quoting some of my thoughts about preemption
blocking further improvements in propeller guards.
- "Prop Guard Ruling is Bad News for Everyone; Dock Talk". Trailer Boats. February 2003. Report on the
Sprietsma v. Mercury Marine ruling.
- Epidemiology of Non-Submersion Injuries in Aquatic Sporting and Recreational Activities. D.J. Chalmers and L. Morrison.
Sports Medicine. 2003. Vol.33. No.10. Pgs. 745-770. This lengthy article points out many water activity dangers
(including prop injury) are relatively poorly documented and risk studies are almost non-existent.
Some approaches to the propeller problem might be better formulated after reading this article. PubMed has an
Abstract.
Full text is available from EBSCO.
- Estimating
Mortality Rates of Adult Fish from Entrainment through the Propellers of River Towboats. Steve Gutreuter. Transactions
of the American Fisheries Society. 2003. Vol.132 Pgs. 646-661. They trawled while following towboats to recover a fraction
of the kills and used a diffusion model to estimate the fraction collected, then extrapolated to determine the total number
of kills for several different species. Note - a related article was published in 2001.
- Propeller Guards and Alternative Propulsion.
Charlotte Harbor Magazine. Jan. 2003. A nice review of the current situation also online at
Prop Guards and Alternative Propulsion
Water Life magazine (water activities magazine for Charlotte Harbor and Lemon Bay FL) January 2003.
- Propeller Guards, Again. Boat & Motor Dealer. Marine Service Technicians Corner. Ralph Lambrecht. Jan/Feb 2003. Pgs. 33 & 37.
This article is a follow up to his article a few years ago and references the recent Mercury Marine law suit. Mr. Lambrecht
seems to think the various guard designs proposed in the past have flaws and problems and does not see them being implemented
in the future as a result of the case. He does not mention or Virtual Propeller Guard concept. He goes on to wonder what people
were doing when they were thrown from the boat and does not anticipate individuals eventually winning these suits for
injuries / deaths. He says, "No one has been able to repeal the laws of physics or mechanics to design a low-drag propeller
guard that is soft, fat and strong regardless of claims."
- Supreme Court Rules in Propeller Guard Case Boat U.S. Government
Affairs. BoatUS Magazine. January 2003. Reports the U.S. Supreme Court struck down federal preemption as a defense in the
Sprietsma propeller case (Rex Sprietsma v. Mercury Marine) involving a lady being struck and killed in 1995. She fell from a
ski boat and was struck by the propeller of its outboard motor. The article includes comments from Joe Pomeroy of Mercury Marine,
Capt. Scott Evans Chief of Boatign Safety for the U.S. Coast Guard, and Marion Cruz, long time propeller safety advocate.
- Propeller Injury Intervention. U.S Coast Guard
article discusses various types of guards and accessories. Was probably written in 2003.
- Propeller Guard Manipulation on the Reduction of Secondary Pressure Waves and Turbidity Levels. Paul Gregory Mueller, 17,
Hilton Head High School, Hilton Head, South Carolina. 2003 Intel ISEF Government and Industry Awards. U.S. Coast Guard for
Projects That Relate to Boating and Water Safety. Honorable Mention Award of $100. Project Number EV111.
2002
- National Public Radio (NPR). All Things Considered. 3 December 2002. Nina Totenberg reporting recap of Boating
Safety Act, Interview w/ Rex Sprietsma (husband of victim in Sprietsma case), Joe Pomeroy of Mercury Marine, and
Leslie Bruckner attorney (represented Sprietsma). Document is a VIDEO available from Video Monitoring Services
of America. Lexis Nexis has summary.
- National Public Radio (NPR). Morning Editions. Alison Aubrey reporting from Washington: Supreme Court on
Sprietsma propeller case. Interview withg Leslie Bruckner with Trial Lawers for Public Justice, Josh Forest with
Maritime Law Association and Richard Epstein with University of Chicago Law School. Document is a VIDEO available
from Video Monitoring Services of America. Lexis Nexis has summary.
- Prop Guards Propelled to Supreme Court. by Elaine Dickinson. BoatUS Magazine. Sept. 2002. reports the Sprietsma
v. Mercury Marine propeller case is headed to the U.S. Supreme Court. It focuses on federal preemption. The article
includes comments from Joe Pomeroy of Mercury Marine, and discusses some briefs filed in the case.
- Assessing the Impact of Boat Propeller Scars on Fish and Shrimp Utilizing Seagrass Beds. by S.S. Bell, M.O. Hall,
S. Soffian, and K. Madley. Ecological Applications. Vol.12 No.1 (2002) Pgs. 206-217. Available from Ingenta.
The article above was a follow up to:
- Faunal Response to Fragmentation in Seagrass Habitats: Implications for Seagrass Conservation. S.S. Bell,
R.A. Brooks, B.D. Robbins, M.S. Fonseca and M.O. Hall. Biological Conservation. Vol.100 No.1. July 2001. Pgs.
115-123. Published by Elsevier.
- Mortality and Morbidity in White Water Rafting in New Zealand. David O'Hare, David Chalmers, N. Adele Arnold, and
Frances Williams. Injury Control and Safety Promotion. 2002. Vol.9 No.3 Pgs. 193-198. Although the paper does not focus
on propeller injuries, many of the methods and approaches used may be helpful in analyzing propeller injuries. Paper
is available for EBSCO. Mr. Chalmers went on to write a related American Journal of Sports Medicine article in 2003.
- Damaging Strikes. Jay Hopkins. Flying. Vol. 129 No.8. Pg. 53 (4 pages). Coverers AIRPLANE propeller strike
injuries and risks.
- Manatees, Bioacoustics and Boats
American Scientist. Mar/Apr 2002. Edmund Gerstein describes a Bioacoustic manatee alarm (manatee hears it) and the use
sound activated light sticks (boaters see them). Several
studies related to the manatee alarm
are on the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission site.
2001
- The Federal Boat Safety Act Preempts State Laws in Claims for Propeller Strike Injuries: Lady v. Neal Glaser Marine,
Inc.. Casenotes. Terri L. Bezdek. Loyola Journal of Public Interest Law. Spring 2001. Page 211.
- Propeller Scarring in a Seagrass Assemblage: Effects on SeaGrass, Physical Processes and Response of Associated
Fauna. by Amy Vanessa Uhrin. Masters Thesis for Master of Marine Science Biological Oceanography. University of Puerto
Rico. Mayaguez Campus. 2001. Covers impact of propellers on SeaGrass. Available from Digital Dissertations.
-
Evaluation of Propeller-Induced Mortality on Early Life Stages of Selected Fish Species. Jack Killgore, Steve Maynord, Matthew
Chan, Raymond Morgan II. North American Journal of Fisheries Management. 2001 Vol.21. Pgs.947-955. Towboat propeller mortality was
evaluated in a large circulating water channel. Five species of fish were tested. They were subjected to one or more shear stress
levels. Mortality was a linear function of shear stress for all species and life stages. Probability of blade contact was approximately
10%, but only a few juvenile common carp displayed blade-type injuries. "Shear stress created from propeller jet velocities in
navigable rivers can exceed 5,000 dynes/cm2 and is probably the primary force contributing to the mortality of ichthyoplankton ...".
Note - a related article was published in 2003.
- Collisions
Between Ships and Whales. David Laist, Amy Knowlton, James Mead, Anne Collet, Michela Podesta. Marine Mammal Science. Vol.17 No.1
(January 2001). Pgs. 35-75. An exceptional historical study of ship - whale collisons, many of which resulted in propeller
injuries to whales. Most the vessels are ships, not recreational boats. They record the type of ship, estimated speed and
other variables to try to better understand the contributing factors. Many of the research techniques, and analysis methods
used would be applicable to a similar historical study of human propeller injuries.
- A Simple and Effective Method for Analyzing
Propeller Marks on Manatee in Brevard County, Florida, USA. by James L. Wood of Lumatrex. 2001. An early prop cut analysis
paper.
2000
- Prop Guard Regulation May Be Coming. Bob Duke. Boating Industry. June 2000. Pgs. 36-39.
Nice summary of current status of the issue and interviews of several players on both sides.
- Motorboat propeller injuries. Di Nunno N, Di Nunno C. Journal of Forensic Sciences. Vol.45 No.4.
July 2000. Pgs: 917-919. Describes the case of an Albanian refugee killed by outboard engine propellers
on rubber dinghy while illegally attempting to reach Italy. The multiple parallel, deep clear-cut
injuries found was uncommon, but characteristic of propeller injuries. The authors said they were
"typical and cannot be mistaken with those produced by sharp objects or shark bites". Injury descriptions
are vital for establishing the position of the victim with regard to the propeller that strikes them.
PubMed has an
abstract.
1999
- 1999 U.S. Coast Guard Report
- Propeller Injury Protection.
U.S. Coast Guard Boating Circular 81. December 1999. Pgs. 4-5. Report on the study, "Injury Protection -
An Evaluation of Commercially Available Devices", the result of a grant to the Marine Technology Society.
(G-OPB-3) U.S. Coast Guard.
- Prop Guards Prevent Injuries. Dr. Robert A. Warren. Expertise, Inc. Boat & Motor Dealer. Nov. 1999. Pg. 44.
- Propeller Guards: A Few Answers. Ralph Lambrecht. Marine Service Technical Corner. Boat & Motor Dealer. Sept. 1999. Pg.39.
He reports recently reading of a professional athlete who fell over the bow when the boat his a wave and was killed by the prop.
Then he goes on to recount typical objections to the use of propeller guards, focusing heavily upon the drag issue of conventional guards.
- Propeller Injury Protection: an Evaluation
of Commercially Available Protection Devices Office of Boating Safety. U.S. Coast Guard. April 26, 1999.
Pgs. 13-15. (.pdf document). Discussion of the study. Evaluates several devices with a 70 HP outboard,
90 HP outboard and 140 HP stern drive on four vessels.
- Homicide or Accident Off the Coast of Florida: Trauma Analysis of Human Remains. P.R. Stubblefield.
Journal of Forensic Science. Vol.44 No.4. July 1999. Pgs. 716-719. Reports on a 1996 Florida Medical
Examiner investigation of a body recovered by the Coast Guard suspected of being murdered or being hit by
a propeller injuries, or both. PubMed has an
abstract.
- Prop-Buddy the Next Generation Propeller Guard. Hiromi Nakamura, Kari Chaney, Stacey Roberts.
SNAME Southeast Section. 20 March 1999. 59 Pages. Paper on a propeller guard design.
See #287 in SNAME list. See the similar listing below in
1998 for more information.
- Propeller Scars On and Known Home Range of
Two Orca (Orcinus Orca) in New Zealand Waters. Ingrid N. Visser. New Zealand Journal of Marine and
Freshwater Research. 1999 Vol.33 Pgs. 635-642. Details information on two whales with deep scars "presumed
to have been caused by boat propellers." Includes several photos of the whales.
- Alcohol-Influenced Recreational Boat Operation in the United States, 1994. Pamela Logan, Jeffrey Sacks,
Christine Branche, George Ryan, Patricia Bender. American Journal of Preventative Medicine. Vol.16 No.4. 1999.
Pg. 278-282. PubMed has an
abstract.
Although propeller injuries are not specifically addressed, it is widely known alcohol is present in many propeller accidents.
This is the definitive work in this area to date and will be useful to those pursuing information on this frequently contributing cause.
1998
- Prop Buddy: The Next Generation Propeller Guard. Stacy Roberts, Hiromi Nakamura, Kari Chaney. OCE 4541:
Ocean Engineering Design. Florida Institute of Technology. Is listed as a 1998 Topic
for this class. See 1999 SNAME paper listed above.
- Propeller Injury Protection: An Evaluation of Commercially Available Protection Devices. A report of the
Marine Technology Society. Prepared for Office of Boating Safety. United States Coast Guard. Prepared by Mancil W.
Milligan and Jeffrey S. Tennant. October 1998. The availability of this report was announced and briefly summarized
on pages 4 and 5 of USCG Boating Safety Circular #81 and
full copies were said to be available through the U.S. Coast Guard. We contacted the U.S. Coast Guard at that time and
were sent a copy (less page 29). This report is a follow up to a study published by the same group in 1997 that only
evaluated propeller guards on paper.
Much later we tracked down page 29 (very significant page as it discusses the effectivity of propeller warning
signs) at MTS and they sent us a copy. We took the liberty of reproducing Page 29
here as it seems the page is extremely difficult to find.
The report is discussed on Pages 13 to 16 of the
63rd NBSAC Meeting.
It is also discussed in a April 26, 1999 Report Briefing presented at
NBSC 63rd Meeting In April 1999.
The briefing provided there used to be online as enclosure 2, but appears to no longer be online (we have a copy).
The briefing is more difficult to understand and follow than the actual paper.
The paper below is related to this paper.
- An Assessment of Propeller Guards Designed for Inboard Vessels on Vessel Operation and Manatee Protection.
Prepared by Mancil W. Mulligan and Jeffrey S. Tennant for the State of Florida Department of Environmental Protection
Division of Marine Resources Protected Species Management. June 1998.
Focuses on guards for true inboards and evaluates them with respect to protecting people and manatees. This paper shares
several concepts with the paper above.
- Motorboat propeller injuries. Mendez-Fernandez. Annals of Plastic Surgery. Aug. 1998. Vol.41 No.2. Pgs.
113-118. Experience with nine propeller injuries are presented. PubMed has an
abstract.
Plus full text is now available in a Coast Guard docket.
- 2 March 1998 CNN Newsday at Noon ET "Supreme Court Hears Product Liability Case" byline to Jeanne Meserve and
Charles Biebauer. 19 year old Kathy Lewis was killed by a propeller and her family contend that propeller guards
would have protected her. They are currently suing for the right to sue (to overcome Federal Pre-emption).
Lexis Nexis has a summary.
- 2 March 1998 WPRI (Rhode Island TV) Channel 12 Eyewitness News; Lewis propeller case against Brunswick. Interviews with
Gary Lewis (the victim's father, Donald Weinberg USCG Auxillary, David Hudson the family's lawyer, and Vick Lewis
the victim's mother. Video Monitoring Services of America has the video. Lexis Nexis has a summary.
- The Federal Boat Safety Act of 1971 and Propeller Strike Injuries: An Unexpected Exercise in Federal Preemption.
Amy P. Chiang. Fordham Law Review. November, 1999. Vol 68, Pg 487. This article is excerpted/republished in
The Advocate in August 2000 by a group of Florida
Trial Lawyers.
- Boat-propeller related injuries - Texas 1997.
JAMA Vol.279 No. 23. Jun 1998. Page 1858.
Background data is online.
Additional info on the same study is available in the Vol.47 No.17. May 8, 1998 issue of Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report, titled Boat
Propeller Related Injuries Texas 1997. The paper is also available at:
Boat-Propeller-Related Injuries -- Texas, 1997.
MMWR 47(17);354-356 Publication date: 8 May 1998. And an
abstract is on a listserv at Duke.
- Propeller Guard Helps Boat Ply Shallow Waters. Tom Porch. The Columbus Dispatch. 3 Mar 1998. A product called
Prop-Stop has three steel tines that extend beyond the propeller blades on the sides and underneath. It protects
the propeller from rocks and debris when running in shallow water.
- 2 March 1998 WTSP-TV (Tampa FL news) News at 5:30 PM Boat Propellers: The U.S. Supreme Court is hearing the case
of an Oklahoma Couple whose daughter died from a propeller strike (Lewis case). Visuals include the young girl's
tombstone. Available from Video Monitoring Services of America. Summarized by Lexis Nexis.
- 1 March 1998 CNN: CNN Sunday 7PM ET "Boating Tragedy Gaindsw Attention of U.S. Supreme Court" reports on
the Lewis case. Includes interviews with her mother, her father and Donald Weinberg with the U.S. Coast Guard
Auxillary. Summary available on Lexis Nexis.
- Whose Law Is It Anyway? Does the Coast Guard's Decision Not to Require Propeller Guards
on Recreational Motorboats Bar Personal Injury Lawsuits Based on State Law? by Mary Elizabeth Phelan
(now Mary Phelan D'Isa). 6 PREVIEW 335 (February 12, 1998).
1997
- Propeller Injury Protection: An Evaluation of the State of the Art of Recreational Watercraft Propulsion
Systems. A report of the Marine Technology Society prepared for the Office of Boating Safety. United States
Coast Guard. Prepared by Mancil W. Milligan and Jefferey S. Tennant. September 1997.
Note - this group published a major follow up study in 1998.
- Prop Guards: Do They Work, Are They Safe? by Jim Flannery. Soundings Trade Only. June 1997. Pgs. 58-59. This trade journal
article reviews the status of recent investigations (the BSAC group and Florida lawmakers), propeller guards and related products
on the market, injury statistics, and manatee issues.
1996
- Should 'State of the Art' Safety Be a Defense Against Liability. James Boyd & Daniel Ingberman.
Discussion Paper 96-01. Written October 1995. Listed with the
1995 RFF papers. They had the full text online
earlier, but is now only an abstract.
- The Anatomy and Biomechanics of Experimentally Traumatized Human Cadaver Lower Extremity Components.
David James Porta. Dissertation. Doctor of Philosophy. Dept of Anatomical Sciences and Neurobiology. School of Medicine.
University of Louisville. Louisville Kentucky. 1 August 1996. This disertation discusses the 1990 OMC and Mercury Marine
testing of propeller guards using cadaver legs by Kress. This section is on pages 148-166 of the dissertation
(Adobe pages 167-185).
- Resources for the Future. Discusses situations, including the Elliot v. Brunswick
propeller guard case, where state of the art is used as a defense by manufacturers. Approx. 1996.
- Volvo Penta Comments Surrounding the Koop / Jones Houseboat Accident. 29 Aug 1996 letter to USCG Docket 10299
comment #2025 including what some might see as a
personal attack on the deceased (use of alcohol on the vessel).
- An Underwater Impact Biomechanics Study to Evaluate a Boat Motor Cage-Type Propeller Guard as a Protective Device. T.A. Kress et. al.
International IRCOBI Conference on Biomechanics of Impact. Dublin Ireland. Pgs. 353-361. 1996. This paper or one extremely similar to it
is available online as part of USCG Docket 10299 comment # 2020. See PDF
pages 9 to 17.
- Impact Biomechanics of the Human Body. Tyler A. Kress. PhD Dissertation University of Tennessee, Knoxville. May 1996.
Part 10: Biomechanical Effectiveness of a Safety Device: A Boat Motor Cage Type Propeller Guard. Pgs. 179-188.
His dissertation based on the Mercury/OMC testing at SUNY.
- Emilo's Mom' Revives Prop Guard Debate. Soundings. July 1996. The first page of this article is available as page 2 of USCG
Docket 10299 comment # 2008.
1995
- Analysis of Watercraft-Related Mortalities of Manatees in Florida, 1979-1991. T.J. O'Shea, B.B. Ackerman, and H.F. Percival.
Population Biology of the Florida Manatee. National Biological Service Information and Technology Report #1. Washington
D.C., Pgs 259-268.
- Marion de Cruz USCG Docket 10299 Response Comment #105 1 July 1995
contains several technical articles and reference materials concering propeller injuries, propeller guards, and related studies, as well as a
14 November 1994 presentation to NBSAC by her, Stacey Eppling, and Don and Carole Falvey. The entire document is approximately 119 pages
in length.
- Analysis of the Regulatory, Legal and Public Policy Issues Surrounding
an Attempt to Commercialize a Safer Outboard Motor Propeller. Gary Eichenbaum. Spring 1995. Wharton College. A 70 page report.
Online as comment #2017 in USCG Docket 10299.
- U.S. Coast Guard Boating Safety Circular #77 "Propeller Accidents Involving Houseboats and Other Displacement Type Recreational
Vessels". Interestingly, this is the only circular missing from the collection made available online by the U.S. Coast Guard from
1989 to present. We copied Page 1 and Page 59 (the propeller accident pages) and put them into a
pdf document.
1994
- "Scuba Diving". in Sports Injuries, Mechanisms, Prevention and Treatment (a book). Scuba Diving section by R.L. Waltrip and
N. Grace. F.H. Fu and D. A Stone editors. Published by Williams and Wilkins. 1994. Discusses scuba diver prop strike injuries.
- Motorboat Propeller Injuries in Wisconsin: Enumeration and Prevention. Hargarten, Karlson, Vernick and Aprahamian. Journal of
Trauma. Vol.37 No.2. Aug 1994. Pgs.187-190. PubMed has an abstract
Same article also published by Journal of Safety Research. Vol.26. No.3. Autumn 1995. Pgs. 200-201.
The full text is available with an introductory letter in U.S. Coast
Guard Docket USCG-2001-10299-9.
- Preventing Propeller and Boat Strike Accidents.
U.S. Coast Guard Boating Safety Circular. June 1994. Pgs 1-2.
- Propeller Safety Tips; Boating Safety. Trailer Boats. April 1994. list of propeller safety tips from Neal Mahan of Underwriters Laboratories.
- "Prop-Mate" Trailer Boats. January 1994. Evaluation / review of the Prop-Mate propeller guard by Jim Barron
of Trailer Boats magazine. They tested the polypropylene ring guard on a 24-foot Godfrey Sweetwater pontoon boat, powered
by a 115-hp Mercury outboard. The guard has been said to improved boat handling at low and moderate speeds. They found
it rather dramatically improved steering control on this pontoon boat, but resulted in a 2.7 mph loss of top speed
(28.3 mph with out it, 25.6 mph with it) and some increased fuel consumption. The article repeatedly points out the
device is being marketed as a handling improver, NOT as a safety device.
1993
- A Study of Boat and Boat Propeller-Related Injuries
in the United States, 1991-1992. Christine M Branche-Dorsey, SM Smith and D. Johnson.Washington, DC: US Department
of Transportation, US Coast Guard, 1993 (report no. CG-D-12-93). Approx. 100 pages. This paper was also presented at
The Second World Conference on Injury Control, Atlanta, GA. Atlanta, GA: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
1993:243. Our copy comes from a military technology site, DTIC. It is a large file and will take a long time on
a dialup connection. It is also available from NTIS.
- Inside Edition. WNYW-TV New York television. Bill O'Reilly anchor. 6 July 1993. Matt Meagher reports on dangers
of boat propellers. Also mentioned are Jim Pree (disabled by a prop and sued Mercury marine), U.S. Marines and Disney
used guards, Christine Fitzpatrick mother of a victim, Ben Kelley propeller injury reduction advocate with the
Institute for Injury Reduction, Bryan Chadwell a propeller guard inventor, and the U.S. Coast Guard Office of Boating
Safety. Text is on Lexis Nexis.
- Injury analysis of Impacts Between a Cage-Type
Propeller Guard and a Submerged Head.
(See pages adobe pages 30 to 40 of this segment for the article.)
Michael Scott, John Labra, Herbert Guzman, James Benedict, Harry Smith and James Ziegler. Biodynamic Research Corporation. 1993.
31st Annual Symposium. November 1993. Las Vegas. Better copies are available from SAFE Association.
This online copy is from the 10299 Docket and was supplied to them by OMC.
1992
- Government and Industry Action Needed to Curb Boat Propeller Injuries. Julie Gannon Shoop. Trial. Vol.28 No.12.
(Dec 1992) Pg. 88.
- The Anatomical Consequences of Underwater Impacting of Human Cadaver Legs with a Prop-Guarded Outboard Motor. David Porta, Peter Fuller,
Tyler A. Kress, and John Snider. Abstract published in Anatomical Record. 1993. Supplement No.1. Pg.96.
- Motorboat Propeller Injuries [monograph]. by S.P. Baker. Jon S. Vernick and Associates. The Johns Hopkins University Injury
Prevention Center and The Institute for Injury Reduction. Sept 1992.
This paper is available online as part of USCG Docket 10299 comment
#106. Report begins on PDF page #102. It is also available as part of
comment #1099 and as part of comment #500 (Hogan).
- Underwriters Laboratories Offers Safety Tips for Avoiding Propeller Strikes. PR Newswire. 29 May 1992. Note -
this list of tips may be the one repeated in Trailer Boats April 1994 article "Propeller Safety Tips (Boating Safety)".
1991
- Towed Watersports: Turning the Tide on Serious Injuries. by M. Gunderson. Pyhsician and Sportsmedicine.
Vol.19 No.8. August 1991. Pgs. 130-136.
- Do Propeller Guards Protect? The Physician and Sportsmedicine. Dec. 1991. Vol.19, No.12. Pg 26.
- Nautical Accidents: Unique Injuries. G.A. Gomez, L.C. Martin, and M.R. Castro. Surgical Clinics of
North America. Vol. 71. No. 2. Pgs. 419-432. 1991.
- 1 August 1991 Business Law Brief "Defense Verdict After Settlement" reports on the McGrath v. Boston Whaler
propeller injury suit in which a man lost both his legs after being thrown from a vessel in a high speed
turn and being struck by the propeller. Yamaha (manufacturer of the engines) said it was not practical
to "fix guards" (probably trying to say its not practical to affix them to their drives). During the trial,
the plaintiff settled, the judge told the jury of the settlement, and the jury gave a unanimous verdict for
the boat owner and the engine distributor on 10 May 1991. Lexis Nexis has a summary of this brief.
1990
1989
- Waterskiing Injuries. by Larry R. Pedegana and Janice Lang. The Physician and Sportsmedicine. Vol.7 No.6. 1979. Cited by
Report of the Propeller Guard Subcommittee NBSAC 7 Nov 1989.
- Experimental Evaluation of Prop-Guard, Inc. Motorboat Propeller Guard. F. Stern. Iowa Institute of Hydraulic
Research, The University of Iowa, IIHR Limited Distribution Report No. 164, October 1989, 13 pp.
- 1989 NBSAC Propeller Guard Subcommittee Report
is online in the 10299 Docket as comment #146.
- Grisly Accidents Spark Campaign for Guards on Boat Propellers. Mike Williams. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
28 Sept 1989. Several accidents have increased the call for propeller guards.
- Calling Out the Guard: Injuries Prompt Drive for Protective Cages on Boat Propellers. Sheryl James. Floridian.
4 Sep 1989. A group of Trial Lawyers calling themselves the "Institute for Injury Reduction" recently held two
conferences on propeller injuries.
- Propeller Guard segment. CBS This Morning. 31 August 1989.
- As Mototboat Injuries Soar, Intitute for Injury Reduction Demands U.S. Coast Guard to Protect Against Propeller
Slashings. 20 July 1989 Press Release from Institute for Injury Reduction (IIR).
- Outboard motor propeller injuries. Kutarski. Injury. Vol.20. No.2. Mar 1989. Pgs.87-91. Seven cases are examined
from a medical standpoint. PubMed has an
abstract.
- Propeller guards for recreational boats: How many more injuries will it take to get them here. BR Hogan III. Trial.
Published Washington D.C., March 1989. Vol.25, No.3. Page 56. Discusses Elliot vs. Brunswick and the need for propeller
guards on recreational boats.
- Outboard Motor Propeller Injuries. P.W. Kutarski of Queen Elizabeth Military Hospital, Woowich, U.K. published in Injury. March 1989.
Vol.20. No.2. Pgs. 87-91. Reviews seven propeller injury cases and reviews the literature. Includes medical practices used to treat the
wounds.
- The Feasibility of Propeller Guarding. Arthur M. Reed. July 1987. Cited by Report of the Propeller Guard Subcommittee NBSAC 7 Nov 1989.
- The Technological Feasibility of Propeller Guarding for Pleasure Planing Craft. John G. Hill. February 10, 1987. Cited by Report of the
Propeller Guard Subcommittee NBSAC 7 Nov 1989.
- Boat Propeller Impact Injuries and Fatalities. Project 763584.20 Final Report. Edward S. Purcell and Walter B. Lincoln. U.S. Coast
Guard Research & Development Center. 1 March 1987. Cited by Report of the Propeller Guard Subcommittee NBSAC 7 Nov 1989.
- Steering / Struck by Propeller Accident Study, 1983 Recreational Boating Accidents. by Gary Traub U.S. Coast Guard G-BP-1. December 18,
1984. Cited by Report of the Propeller Guard Subcommittee NBSAC 7 Nov 1989.
1988
1987
- Motorboat propeller injuries. C.T. Price and C.W. Moorefield. Journal of the Florida Medical Assoc.Vol.76 No.4.
June 1987. Pgs.399-401.
1986
1985
1984
1983
- Evaluation of Potential Management Strategies for the Reduction of Boat-Related Mortality of Manatees: Site-Specific Reduction
of Manatee Boat/Barge Mortality Research Report No. 3: ii + 43. MF Kinnaird. 1983. Includes discussion of propeller guard designs.
1982
- Analysis of Propeller Wounds on Manatees in Florida. by C.A. Beck, R.K. Bonde and G.B. Rathbun. Journal of Wildlife Management.
Vol.46. Pgs. 531-535. An early prop cut analysis paper.
- Waterskiing-Related Injuries. by G. Hummel and B.J. Gainor. American Journal of Sports Medicine. Vol.10 No.2. (July-Aug 1982)
Pgs. 215-218. Investigated injuries include propeller strikes inflicting "devastating battlefield-type wounds." AJSM provides an
abstract.
- Remarkable Findings in the Criminal Dismemberment of a Corpse. by V. Schneider, H. Bratzke, and H. Maxeiner.
Published in Z. Rechtsmed. 1982. Vol.89 No.2. Pgs. 131-143. Two legs and two arms were recovered at sea injuries indicated
both criminal dismemberment and being hit by a propeller as independent events.
- An Analysis of Civil Aviation Propeller-to-Person Accidents: 1965-79. William Collins, Angelo Mastrullo, William Kirkham,
Deborah Taylor and Paul Grape all of the FAA Civil Aeromedical Institute in Oklahoma City or the Office of Airworthiness FAA
Washington DC. Published in Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine. May 1982. Pgs. 458-462. The aviation industry is faced
with a similar problem and they collected and analyize data and took corrective measures. Much can be learned from this paper
on a parallel problem.
The article above was followed up with:
- Review of Civil Aviation Propeller-to-Person Accidents 1980-1989. by W. E. Collins. study performed by Civil Aeromedical
Institute in Oklahoma City. Published Jan. 1993. Available from NTIS.
1981
1980
- Propeller injuries incurred in boating accidents. R.J. Mann. American Journal of Sports Medicine. Vol.8 No.4. Jul-Aug 1980.
Pgs.280-284. Information on 32 cases are presented. Bacteria, salt water and contamination are discussed. PubMed has an
abstract.
1979
- Struck by Propeller Accident Study. Al Marmo. U.S. Coast Guard. October 1979.
- Review of State of the Art of Swimmer Protection from Outboard Propellers. by Robert Tagert. 16 Feb 1979.
Cited by Report of the Propeller Guard Subcommittee NBSAC 7 Nov 1989. One of the first large scale reviews of the
state of the art.
- Epidemiology of Waterskiing
Injuries. John V. Banta MD. Western Medical Journal. Vol.130. Pgs. 493-497. June 1979. Provides a medical review of individuals
involved in four waterski accidents (three of the four involve propeller strikes). Includes photos not for the faint of heart.
This paper was discussed in the 15 June 1979 issue of the Gridley Herald on page 3.
1978
1977
- Causes and Mechanisms of Surgical Care in Propeller Injuries. M. Sabol. V. Rahelic and A. Rukavina. Acta Chir Iugosl. 1977;
24 Supplement 2:331-9. Serbo-Croation (Roman). Note- this reference is in Croation, not English. Medline has a Citation.
1976
- Propeller injuries. Mann. Southern Medical Journal. Vol.69 No,5. May 1976. Pgs.567-569. Information on nine cases and bacteria
problems are discussed. PubMed has an
abstract.
- A Study of Propeller-Guards for High Speed Small Crafts. Tetsuo Takahei and Tetsuo Tagori. Journal of the Kansai Society
of Naval Architects, Japan. The Society of Naval Architects and Naval Architects and Ocean Engineers. Vol.163 Pgs. 25-35. (4th
quarter 1976). English Abstract. Note full text is available from a link
near top right of the abstract page. You may have to save it to disk, then rename the file type to .pdf to view it.
Paper is on designing guards to reduce propeller damages from collisions with driftwood and other floating debris.
- Power Performance of Planing Boats With the Effect of Propeller Selection and Propeller Guard Design. Daniel M. Ladd. a M.S.
thesis from Oregon State University. 1976.
1975
1974
- Speedboat propeller injuries. M.W. Sleight. British Medical Journal. 1974 Vol. 2. (May). Pgs.427-429.
Full text available
from bmj.com
1973
- Injuries Caused by Ship Propellers. J. Batinica. Lijec. Vjesn. 1973. Sept. Vol.95(9). Pg. 509-512. Is abstracted by Medline.
They report the article is in Croatian.
1972
1971
1970
- A Contribution to the Problem of Injuries Caused by Speed Boat Propellers. V. Sustic and L. Drescik. 1970. Lijec Vjesn. Vol.92.
Pg. 663. Note this reference is probably in Croation.
1960's
- High Speed Propeller Injuries of the Brain; Report of Two Cases. Frederick E. Jackson MC. USN, Cdr. American Journal of
Surgery. Sept. 1965. Vol.110. No.3. Pgs. 473-476. Two cases resulting from waterski propeller strikes are discussed.
Recommendations include use of an orange plastic helmet to increase visibility of skiers in the water.
- On Propeller Injuries. by Bosch K. Keller F. Published in Dtsch Z. Gesamte Gerichtl Med. 1963. Vol. 53. Pgs. 97-107.
Article is in German. Medline has a citation.
VIDEO TAPES / FILMS
- Three-P-O Navigator ring/duct type propeller guard by Guy Taylor is covered in this 19 May 2006 news video from KUTV Channel 2
in Salt Lake City. The video runs about four minutes with footage from Lake Powell. The boat runs over large squash and a human dummy
both with and without his guard at planing speeds.
THE VIDEO
- The video tapes below were referenced by the Report of the Propeller Guard Subcommittee NBSAC 7 Nov 1989. If anyone has access to these videos, we would be happy to digitize them and post them for access here. Please contact us if you have one or more of these videos.
- Simulated Underwater Limb Impact Tests (SULIT). Mercury Marine. 1988. 21 minutes.
- A
short clip of what may be this video is online on the State University of New York at Buffalo
CRESE
(Center for Research and Education in Special Environments) video page. This portion shows a
the guard in a water tank impacting a submerged, wired test dummy in the forehead.
- Hirsch, Glover, Robinson & Sheiness, Hammonds vs. Yates Marine Corps Raiders (4 minutes), Guard Operation by Snyder (4 minutes),
Mercury and OMC Log Jumps (4 minutes), Ehrhardt Cage Test "Wynne" (6 minutes).
- Chadwell Propeller Device On-Water Tests. Mercury Marine. 8 minutes.
- Sporting Life IRB's. New Zealand. 25 minutes.
- March 1989 San Diego Tests and March 1989 San Diego Tests, Bruton Tapes, Underwater Video, High Speed Film, Speed Runs.
- Institute for Injury Reduction news conference release tape, propeller injuries/prop guards. June 1989.
- Deposition of Dr. Charles Price. Dated 29 August 1989.
- Propeller Guard Segment of "CBS This Morning". Dated 31 August 1989.
- We have copies of the two videos below, thanks to viewers.
- Simulated Underwater Flesh Impact Test (Sausage Tests). Mercury Marine. 5 minutes.
- Ben Hogan / Stunt Man Propeller Guard Tests. Conducted 9 August 1989. 2 tapes.
