The marine industry has been watching this for a while now.
There is no magic here.
Its performance is most often compared to a "factory" 3 blade SS prop. Hardly an optimal design.
It's relatively easy to reduce slippage in the midrange of any boat by simply increasing the number of blade surfaces to 4, 5, or 6. which is what a sharrow is - a prop with 6 blade surfaces.
They just happened to be connected vs. open which necessitates a CNC machine where a regular 4, 5, or 6 blade can be molded and made much less expensively. Slip is an interesting thing - sometimes you want some of it, sometimes you dont.
The "catch" more blade surfaces = more drag on the top end - to compensate you need to thin them out - a lot. This gets expensive and compromises life. Seriously (for money) high performance designs dont run fully submerged, but partially out of the water.
4,5, and 6 blade CNC milled props have been available for a while and are correspondingly expensive. 7-10K a prop isnt unusual at all.
How much sense does this expense make on a recreational pleasure boat? Not much.
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