Porthandbuoy
Well-Known Member
Not for reasons of drag reduction or fear of clutch damage, but to protect a cutless bearing that is cooled/lubricated via a feed from the seawater cooling circuit.
I have a fixed three blade prop. Just to clarify my query; I am only concerned about the cutless bearing which is not being force-fed water when the engine is not running, Under sail the shaft spins. Need I be concerned about the cutless bearing?
That is not the case. There have been many studies, amongst others by Strathclyde University, Maine Sail and Yachting Monthly, all of which show that the drag of a spinning prop is considerably less than that of a fixed oneI believe that with a fixed prop there is no difference in drag weather it is locked or not.
If that is true, there is certainly a difference in noise, wear on the cutlass, shaft and gearbox, if it is locked or not.
Plank
I'm not an engineer, but some water will be getting in, and the bearing isn't under load the way it is when under power, so I wouldn't expect undue wear.I have a fixed three blade prop. Just to clarify my query; I am only concerned about the cutless bearing which is not being force-fed water when the engine is not running, Under sail the shaft spins. Need I be concerned about the cutless bearing?
I have a fixed three blade prop. Just to clarify my query; I am only concerned about the cutless bearing which is not being force-fed water when the engine is not running, Under sail the shaft spins. Need I be concerned about the cutless bearing?
You aren't the firstWatching mine spin enthusiastically while under sail, I wondered yet again about extracting that wasted energy. The plotter is quite thirsty.
The 'clunk' is quite normal on a gearbox with some miles on it. The transfer gear moves from front to back between forward and reverse, the clearance is small, around .002 inch on my box, but it increases a little with wear. The sound is made by the gear moving from one thrust bearing to the other.With regard to potential gearbox damage. Is it the act of engaging reverse while the prop is spinning that causes the problem? There is a definite ‘clunk’ that makes me kind of nervous. Perhaps the answer is to stop engine, let the boat slow until the prop stops spinning, then sheet in the sails.
Just looked at the price of feathering props. ?
With regard to potential gearbox damage. Is it the act of engaging reverse while the prop is spinning that causes the problem? There is a definite ‘clunk’ that makes me kind of nervous. Perhaps the answer is to stop engine, let the boat slow until the prop stops spinning, then sheet in the sails.
Just looked at the price of feathering props. ?
Yep Vyv , half a knot on our 8.6m boat.That is not the case. There have been many studies, amongst others by Strathclyde University, Maine Sail and Yachting Monthly, all of which show that the drag of a spinning prop is considerably less than that of a fixed one