
Estimate planing speed using Crouch's formula
Crouch's formula: S = C ร โ(P / D). Where P is kW, D is displacement in kg, and C is hull constant.
Powered by Toolraxy

Founder & CEO, Toolraxy
Faiq Ur Rahman is a web designer, digital product developer, and founder of Toolraxy, a growing platform of web-based calculators and utility tools. He specializes in building structured, user-friendly tools focused on health, finance, productivity, and everyday problem-solving.
User Ratings:
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Understanding your powerboatโs potential top speed is crucial for performance tuning, propeller selection, and realistic trip planning. This Boat Speed Calculator appliesย Crouchโs formula, the industry-standard method for estimating the speed of planing hullsโboats designed to rise out of the water and glide on top of it.
Unlike displacement hull calculators that focus on waterline length, this tool uses your boatโs shaft horsepower (in kilowatts), total displacement (in kilograms), and a selectable Crouch constant that represents your hull typeโfrom average runabouts to racing catamarans. The result is an estimated speed in knots, km/h, and MPH, plus a power-to-weight ratio and travel time for 10 nautical miles. Powered by Toolraxy, this calculator provides transparent, instant results entirely in your browser, helping you make informed decisions about your vesselโs performance before you hit the water.
ย
Enter Shaft Horsepowerย โ Input your engineโs power in kilowatts (kW). Default is 300 kW.
Enter Boat Displacementย โ Provide your vesselโs total weight in kilograms (kg). Default is 3500 kg.
Select Boat Typeย โ Choose from High-performance speedboat, Average planing hull, Sports cruiser, Racing catamaran, or Custom.
Set Custom Constant (Optional)ย โ If you select โCustom Crouch constant,โ enter a value between 50โ300.
Click โCalculateโย โ The tool updates automatically when you change any input.
View Speed Resultsย โ See estimated speed in knots, km/h, and MPH.
Review Power-to-Weight Ratioย โ Displayed in watts per kilogram (W/kg).
Check Travel Timeย โ See estimated time to cover 10 nautical miles at the calculated speed.
Copy or Shareย โ Use the Copy or Share buttons to save or send your results.
ย
This calculator strictly implementsย Crouchโs formula, a naval engineering method for predicting the top speed of planing powerboats. All calculations are performed client-side in your browser for privacy.
Formula: Crouchโs Planing Speed Equation
Speed (knots) = C ร โ(P / D)
Where:
Speedย = Estimated boat speed inย knotsย (nautical miles per hour)
Cย = Crouchโs hull constant (dimensionless, based on hull design)
Pย = Shaft horsepower inย kilowatts (kW)
Dย = Boat displacement inย kilograms (kg)
Derived Outputs:
km/h:ย Speed (knots) ร 1.852
MPH:ย Speed (knots) ร 1.15078
Power-to-Weight Ratio:ย (P / D) ร 1000ย (displayed in W/kg)
Travel Time (10 NM):ย 10 nautical miles รท Speed (knots)ย (displayed in hours/minutes or minutes)
Crouch Constant Values (C):
The tool provides five predefined constants based on boat type:
| Boat Type | Constant (C) |
|---|---|
| High-performance speedboat | 190 |
| Average planing hull / runabout | 150 |
| Sports cruiser | 180 |
| Racing catamaran / hydroplane | 220 |
| Custom | User-defined (50โ300) |
Letโs calculate the estimated top speed for a high-performance speedboat.
Step 1: Input the values
Shaft Horsepower (P):ย 300ย kW
Displacement (D):ย 3500ย kg
Boat Type:ย High-performance speedboat (C = 190)
Step 2: Apply Crouchโs formula
Power-to-Weight Ratio (P/D) = 300 รท 3500 = 0.0857
โ0.0857 = 0.2928
Speed (knots) = 190 ร 0.2928 =ย 55.6 knots
Step 3: Derive other values
km/h:ย 55.6 ร 1.852 =ย 103.0 km/h
MPH:ย 55.6 ร 1.15078 =ย 64.0 MPH
Power-to-Weight Ratio:ย 0.0857 ร 1000 =ย 85.7 W/kg
10 NM Travel Time:ย 10 รท 55.6 = 0.18 hours โย 11 minutes
Interpretation:ย This high-performance speedboat has an estimated top speed of 55.6 knots (64 MPH), which is realistic for a lightweight, powerful vessel. The power-to-weight ratio of 85.7 W/kg indicates strong acceleration capability. For comparison, if you selected โAverage planing hull (C=150)โ instead, the speed would drop to 43.9 knotsโdemonstrating how hull design dramatically affects performance.
ย
Crouchโs formula is a naval engineering equation used to estimate the theoretical top speed of planing powerboatsโvessels that rise onto the waterโs surface at high speed. Developed by naval architect George Crouch, the formula relates shaft horsepower, displacement, and a hull-specific constant. It is important because it allows boat designers, manufacturers, and owners to predict performance without expensive on-water testing, helping with engine selection, propeller matching, and realistic speed expectations.
You can manually calculate planing speed in four steps:
Measure shaft horsepowerย in kilowatts (kW). If you have HP, convert: 1 HP = 0.7457 kW.
Measure displacementย in kilograms (kg). If you have pounds, convert: 1 lb = 0.4536 kg.
Divideย horsepower by displacement (P รท D).
Take the square rootย of that result.
Multiplyย by your hullโs Crouch constant (C).
For example: 300 kW รท 3500 kg = 0.0857; โ0.0857 = 0.2928; 0.2928 ร 190 = 55.6 knots.
Using HP instead of kWย โ Crouchโs formula as implemented requires kilowatts. Entering HP directly overestimates speed significantly.
Using total boat weight including trailerย โ Displacement means the boatโs weight when floating (hull, engine, fuel, gear, people), not dry weight on a trailer.
Ignoring the hull constantย โ Using C=220 for a heavy fishing boat produces fantasy speeds. Be honest about your hull type.
Assuming the formula works for displacement hullsย โ Crouchโs formula applies only to planing boats. Displacement hulls (sailboats, trawlers) require the hull speed formula (1.34 ร โLWL).
You own an average planing runabout (C=150) that currently has 150 kW and weighs 2000 kg. Current estimated speed: 150 ร โ(150รท2000) = 150 ร โ0.075 = 150 ร 0.2739 = 41.1 knots. You are considering upgrading to 250 kW. New estimated speed: 150 ร โ(250รท2000) = 150 ร โ0.125 = 150 ร 0.3536 = 53.0 knots. The 100 kW increase yields nearly 12 knots more speed. However, the calculator also shows the power-to-weight ratio improving from 75 W/kg to 125 W/kg, indicating significantly better acceleration. This data helps you decide if the upgrade is worth the cost.
ย
Saves timeย โ No manual square roots or unit conversions needed.
Reduces manual errorsย โ Automates Crouchโs formula with precise constants.
Instant resultsย โ Updates dynamically as you change any input.
Freeย โ No cost, no registration, no hidden fees.
Privateย โ All calculations happen in your browser; no data is sent to any server.
Accessible on any deviceย โ Fully responsive design works on phones, tablets, and desktops.
User-focusedย โ Provides multiple outputs (knots, km/h, MPH, power ratio, travel time) in one view.
ย
How accurate is Crouchโs formula for boat speed?
Crouchโs formula is accurate to within 10โ15% for well-designed planing hulls in ideal conditions. Real-world speed varies due to hull fouling, propeller condition, load distribution, and sea state.
Can I calculate boat speed manually without a tool?
Yes. The formula is S = C ร โ(P รท D). Use kilowatts for P, kilograms for D, and your hull constant (typically 150โ220). Multiply the result by 1.15078 for MPH or 1.852 for km/h.
What causes planing speed to change the most?
Power-to-weight ratio (P รท D) has the largest impact. Reducing weight or increasing horsepower both increase speed, but weight reduction affects the square root, making it highly effective. Removing 500 kg from a 3500 kg boat increases speed by approximately 8%.
Is this tool safe to use for navigation planning?
This tool provides theoretical estimates only. Do not use it for safety-critical navigation, fuel planning, or legal compliance. Always verify with GPS, manufacturer specifications, and real-world sea trials.
What is the difference between Crouchโs formula and hull speed formula?
Crouchโs formula applies to planing boats that rise out of the water. Hull speed (1.34 ร โLWL) applies to displacement boats that push through water. Using the wrong formula produces wildly inaccurate results.
Why is my speed showing in knots, km/h, and MPH?
Knots (nautical miles per hour) is the standard marine unit. km/h and MPH are provided for land-based comparison and driver familiarity. The tool converts using fixed factors: 1 knot = 1.852 km/h = 1.15078 MPH.
How do I convert my engineโs horsepower to kilowatts?
Multiply horsepower (HP) by 0.7457. For example, 400 HP ร 0.7457 = 298.3 kW. The calculator expects kilowatts, so use this conversion if your engine is rated in HP.
Does displacement include fuel, passengers, and gear?
Yes. For accurate results, displacement should represent the boatโs total weight when floatingโhull, engine, full fuel tanks, batteries, gear, passengers, and provisions. Dry weight from the manufacturer is insufficient.
What Crouch constant should I use for a center console fishing boat?
Most center consoles and bay boats use C = 150 (average planing hull). If the boat has a stepped hull or is particularly lightweight, C = 160โ170 may be appropriate. Racing-style hulls are rare on fishing boats.
Can I use this calculator for a jet boat or outboard-powered boat?
Yes, but use crankshaft or flywheel horsepower, not jet pump or propeller shaft losses. The formula assumes efficient power delivery. Jet boats typically lose 15โ30% of power compared to propellers, so real speed will be lower.
How does the power-to-weight ratio help me?
Power-to-weight ratio (W/kg) directly correlates with acceleration and hill-climbing ability in cars, and with holeshot (time to plane) in boats. A higher ratio means faster planing and better performance when loaded.
Why does the custom constant field disappear when I select a preset?
The custom constant field only appears when you select โCustom Crouch constantโ from the dropdown. This keeps the interface clean while still allowing advanced users to input their own hull constant values.
The Boat Speed Calculator provides theoretical estimates only, based strictly on Crouchโs formula:ย Speed (knots) = C ร โ(P / D) where P is shaft horsepower in kilowatts and D is displacement in kilograms. Actual boat performance varies significantly due to hull design, propeller efficiency, load distribution, water conditions, engine tuning, altitude, and hull fouling. The predefined Crouch constants (150, 180, 190, 220) are industry averages and may not precisely match your specific vessel. This tool is for informational and planning purposes only and should not be used for safety-critical navigation, commercial operations, or vessel performance guarantees. Always consult your boat manufacturer, conduct on-water trials, and follow local maritime regulations. Toolraxy assumes no liability for decisions made based on these calculations.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT