jfm
Well-Known Member
10 Amps continuously
The u-a website says 20watts per vibrator, so 1 amp per vibrator at 24v and 1/10th amp off the dock mains. And you only need 2 vibrators for a 10-20m boat
10 Amps continuously
And you only need 2 vibrators for a 10-20m boat
JFM
Have you considered PropSpeed for your stern gear?
This does seem to work. I have it on my new boat but have had no personal experience of it so far.
I tried Propspeed on my boat in Majorca. I had it applied by their local agent so there was no doubt it was applied properly. Within weeks it was flaking off the props and allowing the usual colony of barnacles to take up residence. Complete waste of money and very disappointing. IMHO it may work with slower moving props on displacement vessels but it just cannot adhere to fast moving props on planing boats.
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I'm waiting to see whether jfm's installation works so keep the info coming, John![]()
The u-a website says 20watts per vibrator, so 1 amp per vibrator at 24v and 1/10th amp off the dock mains. And you only need 2 vibrators for a 10-20m boat
Deleted User, I wonder if they bodged your propspeed? Mine definitely adhered, becuase could see the sheen after it was lifted out. But barnacles grew on it. I'll try to find the pics and make a post now. Will take me 30mins+ so don't wait up!
I'm kinda mind made up to put this ultrasonic vibrator stuff in, ore out of curiosity than anything else. I've already run the 220v and 24v cables from breaker panel to the rudder compartment to power it, so the remaining install is only a few hours work max. I'm hoping to get a discount at LIBS otherwise it's £1745, sheesh. Spose I could eBay if it doesn't work![]()
....cost €1000+
I'm confused. If it worked for you, why are you bothering with ultrasonic?
Pardon me a slight drift here, but as I'm not familiar with barnacles I'll need to ask a silly question: how hard the barnacle attaches itself to the surface? How big a job would it be to dive down and manually scrub the props and rudders clean?
I realize that it's not very convenient but just to get a picture.
Not difficult but a bit unpleasant.
They come off quite easily but as you scrape, all the bits get in your hair and BC etc.
Lots of people in the Med pay for commercial divers to clean the props and rudders etc regularly.
Pardon me a slight drift here, but as I'm not familiar with barnacles I'll need to ask a silly question: how hard the barnacle attaches itself to the surface? How big a job would it be to dive down and manually scrub the props and rudders clean?.
Just to rub this in
These are pics from a previous post - a Sunseeker treated with both Ultrasonics and Propslip (which I believe to be Propspeed)
I saw the results and the Propspeed (if that is what it is) was definately applied properly at Sunseekers Poole factory. Less than 2 months in the Med.
From what I've seen, neither of these treatments are any good.
Pardon me a slight drift here, but as I'm not familiar with barnacles I'll need to ask a silly question: how hard the barnacle attaches itself to the surface? How big a job would it be to dive down and manually scrub the props and rudders clean?
I realize that it's not very convenient but just to get a picture.
They're pretty hard to shift and sharp enough to cut your hands. I use a pallet knife to scrape them off but I've learnt to wear thick gardening gloves whilst doing it. I use professional divers regularly and 2 of them take about 1 hour to do props, shafts, rudders, bow thruster, intakes and log wheel but they do a very good job