I'm very confused by your answer.
There's nothing "linear" in the blade shape I'm talking about. I didn't mean to imply it, I didn't write it, and I don't even carve my own blades with linear twist, so I don't know where that idea came from. But if somehow that came across, then I apologize for confusing you. I read what you wrote anyway. It's all good. Just not relevant to what I asked.
The graphic I was referring to is this one, below. The twist is not linear.

Perhaps you would appreciate looking at a copy of Hugh's blade geometry spreadsheet, to get a better understanding of how this can be calculated. Without differential equations.
https://scoraigwind.com/sheets/bladedesign.xlsBut this also distracts from my previous question/request:
Can you offer a comparison that is fair, by comparing two blades of the same area?
If you design a tapered blade which would have the same blade area as for a constant chord blade, this blade must have a higher design tip speed ratio and this would be comparing apples with pears.
That's a problematic statement. There's no need to compromise the TSR just because a tapered area is selected.
It may help if I explain a little better why I am pressing the subject. When estimating a performance parameter like startup torque, you tend to be looking at the rotor as a whole, not just the detail in the analysis. If you are a designer choosing the blade taper, you probably already have a TSR selected, but you probably also have weight and airfoil and manufacturing to consider. In that situation I would be likely to make as many factors equal as possible (TSR, span, area, airfoil, L/D) before making the starting torque comparison with varying taper ratios. Do 3 or 4 choices of taper ratio and see what's optimised. That would serve as a design comparison of start-up behaviour, useful for guidance when turning around to attempt to optimize a different parameter.
I do usually go for apples, though
