Re: "new" bronze prop.
Bronze two blade prop is OLD School racing. It is just an emotional thing with me. To me there is NOTHING better looking on a boat than a newly polished bronze prop.
Years ago, before the technology permitted casting of stainless props, Bronze was the material to use because it was so much stronger than aluminum yet easy to cast and machine. Indeed, because of its ease of casting and machining it is still used on larger inboard cruisers in the range of 16 inch diameter and up. It is also used on older inboard specialty ski boats in the 10-13 inch range but has mostly been supplanted in these small sizes by stainless. Because bronze is stronger than aluminum, the blades can be made thinner with less parasitic drag through the water and just like stainless, the blades flex less under running loades, resulting in increased efficiency over aluminum.
The theory of two blade versus three blade was that each blade of a two blade prop was turning in "cleaner" water, undisturbed by other blades and was thus more efficient. The actuality is that while each blade is more efficient, more blades does increase the total efficiency of the prop by a few percentage points.
However as I said before, this is old school design and thinking. With new prop design, cleaver blades, and surface running props used in racing, this is no longer true. On the real Go-Fast boats with esoteric drives, you will see 5 and 6 blade props while on high powered outboards you may see 4 and 5 blade props.