Let me give a couple of serious answers to your questions:
talbot wrote:Questions: (1) Why does displacement not figure into the max. hull speed formula? I have similar WL and sail area to a neighboring Catalina 18, but I'm sure my 600-lb dinghy moves faster than the half-ton ballasted c18.
Water waves of different length travel at different speeds (that's different from the way sound works, by the way, or light waves, for that matter).
Because of that effect, the point you reach "hull speed" is when the bow wave will have its trough at the stern and you are sailing "uphill" constantly. (Remember, the speed of this wave depends only on it's length). For most hulls (and yes, that's
most and not
all) this behavior of the bow wave means that the drag increases dramatically as you get closer to that speed. At some point near the "hull speed" the driving force from your sails (or engine) can't keep up and that's your top speed.
If your hull is light (and flat) it doesn't take too much power to put it on a plane. For the DS, sailing in the right circumstances will allow sail power to get the boat over the "hump" in the drag curve, after which the total drag is less again (but will then increase with speed).
Some hulls have no humps (some of the fast skiffs). Some hulls have insurmountable humps (oil tankers). Some boats can be pushed on a plane with an engine but might not plane under sail (I believe the McGregor would be an example).
talbot wrote:(2) Is there a theoretical top speed for the DS II (or any planing hull) after it gets on top of its bow wave?
Yes - but it's specific to the boat. Your top speed is reached when the (maximal) drive from your sails matches the drag at that speed. Boats with higher sail carrying ability for the same weight (skiffs, trapeze boats, windsurfer) would go faster. Unlike the speed of the bow wave for a given length, there's no easy formula.