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Jim Jim is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: May 2007
Posts: 144
Default weight of prop vs. the outdrive.


"trainfan1" wrote in message
et...
Jim wrote:
It appears that you are quite knowledgeable on the subject.


Oh please.

I'm just an old outboard mechanic(both me & the outboards).


What are your thoughts on the relative merits of aluminum vs. stainless
steel recreational boat propellers?


For recreational boats, under 50mph, aluminum is just fine.

I have one AL 19p for one of my 115 Evinrudes that performs just about as
well as as my SSTII 19p prop. I had it double-cupped at rebuild years ago
and am very satisfied. It just blows out a little faster in hard turns
with lots of trim.

At higher speeds, blade shape, contour, & thinness is much more critical,
and SS provides the builder with the ability to make a thinner blade. The
blades can do their work w/o displacing as much water as with AL.

AL is ~1/3 the cost of SS and is more forgiving to your gear train in the
case of striking a submerged object. You are more likely to lose a blade
or two instead of banging up a SS and putting a little "english" in your
propshaft.

SS is for optimal performance. Some special SS applications do exist,
like if you are running through sandbars often. The SS will get polished,
the AL will get "resized".

4 blade props are overkill unless you have a hull design that can benefit
from the extra surface area to correct a bow-heavy porpoising situation.
The most efficient props are 1-bladed, but they are tough to balance.
Three blades seems to be a good compromise for mid power & speeds.

In all reality, AL is the best choice for recreational boating. Always
carry a spare, & the tools to change it.

Rob



"trainfan1" wrote in message




Good post. I can't help thinking that you would get better gas mileage with
a more efficient ss prop. Notice I said mileage not performance.
One blade prop? You mean like an auger?