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Just trying to establish my prop size. This is on my Neptunian 33.
I have some measurements somewhere but can't find them.
Can anyone guess/interpolate ??
If you clean the crud off, you will likely find it stamped on the boss, or alternatively on either the forward or aft face, which of course means removing the prop. Diameter is easy to measure - it will be either 17 or 18", but to measure pitch you need the prop off and mount it on a table to measure the angles of the blades.
Not a lot of real need to measure it though. If it works on the existing engine as I imagine it does after all these years, then it is OK.
If you go for a new engine you will almost certainly need a new prop, not least because it will likely turn the other way, although you can get reduction boxes that turn either way if your current prop is the correct size. Either Beta or your prop supplier will calculate the prop size for you and advise on the correct gearbox, both reduction ratio and rotation direction.
Errrrr ..... I seemed to have missed something here Tranona. Why are you dismissing the 10 inch pitch so quickly?
Richard
Not dismissing it at all. Just don't see any mention of 10" pitch. You suggested 8*10 which means 8" diameter and 10" pitch, which is implausible so I ignored it! It could well be 18*10, but don't see how you can be accurate for pitch just looking at a photo. 18" diameter would be plausible for the engine and 10" pitch maybe, but a bit shallow.
Anyway only relevant if he wants to reuse the old prop, but that depends on which engine/box he chooses. May well need repitching even if the diameter is OK.
Sorry. I sort of assumed he would have read that so did not look at the numbers that closely. So 18*10 is probably right.
I'm idly re-opening this thread from almost a year ago, because it may help me understand the difference that pitch makes.
I rather admire the Neptunian's tall wheel-shelter, but I imagine it has a regrettable slowing effect, steering into a fresh headwind...
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...I suppose that a fairly small engine (say 25hp) could turn a high-pitched propellor fast enough to give the six-tonne Neptunian her 7-knot hull speed, on a calm day in flat water...
...but to maintain that speed against a strong wind or waves, I'm guessing a much more powerful engine would be needed, turning a much-reduced pitch propellor of the same diameter, much faster? Rather like dropping to a low gear, to climb a steep hill?
Except...the gearbox in a road vehicle makes different gradients possible for the same engine...not a more powerful one.
So...if a fairly small marine diesel, matched to the appropriate propellor for the vessel, can achieve the displacement maximum speed in flat water, isn't a reduced-pitch propellor with the same engine, a better solution for increasing thrust in hard weather?
Given that most new displacement-hulled yachts are sold with several engine options, the least of which can achieve hull speed in light conditions, while even the biggest option can never significantly exceed hull speed...what's the value of the bigger engine?
Is it illusory, to fit a bigger engine for more confident passage-making in poor weather?
...for a given prop RPM, there is a graph of thrust vs boat speed.
Except...the gearbox in a road vehicle makes different gradients possible for the same engine...not a more powerful one.
So...if a fairly small marine diesel, matched to the appropriate propellor for the vessel, can achieve the displacement maximum speed in flat water, isn't a reduced-pitch propellor with the same engine, a better solution for increasing thrust in hard weather?
Given that most new displacement-hulled yachts are sold with several engine options, the least of which can achieve hull speed in light conditions, while even the biggest option can never significantly exceed hull speed...what's the value of the bigger engine?
Is it illusory, to fit a bigger engine for more confident passage-making in poor weather?
I believe all you say...just can't picture it yet.
Is there any authoritative simple guide I can look up, rather than pester the forum?