robbieg
Well-Known Member
Been reading some articles suggesting slight overpropping to acheive hull speed at lower than max engine revs. For example on an engine that will rev up to 3600 rpm you prop it so that it maxs at 3200 and so at 2600rpm you will get the same boat speed as would need 3000 rpm on an engine propped to max at 3600rpm. Lower rpm means lower fuel consumption and quiter cruising with the trade off of not having max hp available in a head sea etc
All fair enough but I thought overpropping meant putting strain on the engine-from what these articles suggest however the engine only starts to suffer if you try to get her to max revs which she can't do and starts throwing out black smoke etc. Provide you run the engine a couple of hundred rpm below this point she isn't under any undue strain so shouldn't affect engine life etc.
Anyone know whether this is right or does carrying too large a prop put a strain on the engine accross the complete rev range? Interested because it seems I may be slightly overpropped-although by accident rather than design!
All fair enough but I thought overpropping meant putting strain on the engine-from what these articles suggest however the engine only starts to suffer if you try to get her to max revs which she can't do and starts throwing out black smoke etc. Provide you run the engine a couple of hundred rpm below this point she isn't under any undue strain so shouldn't affect engine life etc.
Anyone know whether this is right or does carrying too large a prop put a strain on the engine accross the complete rev range? Interested because it seems I may be slightly overpropped-although by accident rather than design!