No, not another typical tire question about what swims and what doesn't!

I'm wondering if anyone has ever tried the "fender trick" that you used to see in SAE Baja water events?
For the uniformed, it's basically a fairly close fitting fender on the rear wheels that have a "jet" pointed out the back. What it does is prevent the tire front throwing water forward and essentially "scrapes" the water off the tire and forces it to be thrown rearward, creating forward thrust.
Here's a vid:
They don't have the water event (got rid of it in 2012) but as you can see it seems to be quite effective. Some even have had "non-swimming" tires work reasonably well, with semi-swimming tires showing great gains.
But they may be a problem in swamp or deep mud if that's what you normally travel.
I was just curious if anyone had tried it as my argo currently has 8 "knobby" tires on it and doesn't swim a damn with them. You get in water and it just goes around in circles if you are trying to use the tires for propulsion (I currently have an outboard for any length of water travel).
I thought I might make a temporary scraper of some sort and see if it makes it swim at all, for curiosity's sake as much as anything else. With no suspension on the argo, it would seem a relatively easy thing to try, just bolt it on a give 'er a go! Doesn't work; pull 'em off again.
I also ran across the "penguin" amphib, which apparently used "paddles" on the rims:
That's an interesting method of getting water propulsion as well and would seem to be a reasonably easy modification....

I'm wondering if anyone has ever tried the "fender trick" that you used to see in SAE Baja water events?
For the uniformed, it's basically a fairly close fitting fender on the rear wheels that have a "jet" pointed out the back. What it does is prevent the tire front throwing water forward and essentially "scrapes" the water off the tire and forces it to be thrown rearward, creating forward thrust.
Here's a vid:
They don't have the water event (got rid of it in 2012) but as you can see it seems to be quite effective. Some even have had "non-swimming" tires work reasonably well, with semi-swimming tires showing great gains.
But they may be a problem in swamp or deep mud if that's what you normally travel.
I was just curious if anyone had tried it as my argo currently has 8 "knobby" tires on it and doesn't swim a damn with them. You get in water and it just goes around in circles if you are trying to use the tires for propulsion (I currently have an outboard for any length of water travel).
I thought I might make a temporary scraper of some sort and see if it makes it swim at all, for curiosity's sake as much as anything else. With no suspension on the argo, it would seem a relatively easy thing to try, just bolt it on a give 'er a go! Doesn't work; pull 'em off again.
I also ran across the "penguin" amphib, which apparently used "paddles" on the rims:
That's an interesting method of getting water propulsion as well and would seem to be a reasonably easy modification....
Comment