Joe and Charlie
Joe: Theoretical hull speed is based on a theoretical bath tub. That is, no wind, no waves and no current. So your theoretical hull speed can be exceeded if the current is going with you. For instance, you are at THS of 6 knots, the current is pushing from behind at 5 knots,then you are actually moving at 11 Knots. The THS is a calculation made based on a sine wave pattern of a real wave that your boat makes going through the water. If you were to apply enough power, what would happen is that your bow would ride up on top of its own bow wave, and your stern would squat in the low part. YOu would then actually exceed the THS, but with a disproportionate amount of extra power. You could for example triple you power and fuel consumption and only go maybe 10 to 15% faster. These are not actual figures, but thats the general idea without gettingb too technical.Charlie: Theoretical Hull Speed only applies to displacement hulls. A planing hull has no maximum THS based per se. The top speed of a planing hull would be limited to horse power,hull shape and how much stress it can take before it shakes itself apart.These statements may not be totally correct, but i'm trying to keep it as non-technical as possible Tony B