Is My Gearbox On Its Way Out??

makingplansfor

Well-Known Member
Joined
19 Oct 2010
Messages
176
Location
Plymouth
Visit site
I have a Hurth HBW 100 which I normally leave in neutral when sailing to allow the prop to spin. Whilst pottering in the engine bay while sailing I needed to lock the shaft so engaged the gearbox: when engaged forward, the shaft continued to spin but when engaged aft, it locked. This doesn't seem quite right to me as I would expect that when engaged the shaft should be locked irrespective of direction. There is no sign of clutch slippage when motoring so am I missing something or is the gearbox on its way out?
 
I have a Hurth HBW 100 which I normally leave in neutral when sailing to allow the prop to spin. Whilst pottering in the engine bay while sailing I needed to lock the shaft so engaged the gearbox: when engaged forward, the shaft continued to spin but when engaged aft, it locked. This doesn't seem quite right to me as I would expect that when engaged the shaft should be locked irrespective of direction. There is no sign of clutch slippage when motoring so am I missing something or is the gearbox on its way out?

I had the same gearbox a few years ago and had to change it for a ZF10M which is an exact replacement but with a very slight gear ration difference, however on both I also leave it in neutral when under sail and have not
had any problems, if it works ahead/astern ok when the engine is running be happy and leave it !
 
On a Hurth HBW box, when the engine is stopped and you are sailing, you should not put it in forward gear when going forward - use neutral or, to lock the prop, reverse. If you are sailing backwards you should put the box in forward gear or neutral :)
 
With a two blade folder (and a Hurth) on switching off I put it briefly into reverse to fold the prop. I'd expect forward to allow continued rotation and not force a fold.
 
Thanks for the responses, sounds like all is ok - I still don't get it though......

In gear surely means shaft attached to engine whether in reverse or forward - unless the clutch is direction sensitive and designed to slip in one direction?? Of course I could be overthinking it :confused: always a danger...... thinking!!
 
There's a servo action in these conical clutches. That's probably what keeps the gearbox engaged in reverse when sailing and in forward or reverse when motoring.
 
Top