dito Landsend
The prop has too shallow (low numerically) a pitch. The prop and engine are matched to drive the boat at hull speed when the engine is at max continuous RPM. Assume the prop is 50% efficient.A sailboat should have a hull speed of around 1.3*sqrt(LWL). For your boat LWL is 22' so hull speed is 6.1 knots. Imagine that the prop is 100% efficient. Each revolution the prop advances by an amount equal to its pitch (inches/revolution). Each minute the prop will advance by pitch*RPM (inches) convert inches to NM, factor in the efficiency and you have the speed that that pitch prop would drive the boat at max continuous RPM. Since you want the pitch and not the speed rework the equation with max continuous RPM and 50% efficiency orpitch*RPM*conversion_factor*efficiency=knots to start. Reworking you getknots/(RPM*conversion_factor*efficiency)=pitch. Substituting you get6.1 / (max_continuous_RPM*(1/1216)*0.5)= pitch of ideal prop to buy.Since there was lots of guessing about efficiency, hull speed, etc and props generally only come in a few pitches should you go for one with more or less pitch. More pitch will put the engine at a lower RPM at hull speed while less pitch will put the engine at a higher RPM at hull speed. I'd go for a higher than calculated pitch as you can't run the engine over speed for long and get away with it. This is the situation you have now, a low pitch prop running at max continuous RPM and not reaching hull speed.If you give me the max_continiuous_RPM and a small fee I'll calculate the pitch you need. ;-)