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Bruce[_3_] Bruce[_3_] is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Feb 2009
Posts: 503
Default Two steps forward, and one step - a huge one - back...

On Fri, 7 Sep 2012 11:56:00 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote:

"Flying Pig" wrote in message
...
I made great progress in the alignment saga today. Lots more contortions, but
the exertion part was alleviated by the borrowing of a couple of very serious
wrenches, allowing me better leverage. Once I had stuff moving, I could use my
smaller wrenches to good effect, having the ability to move them further
because they were lots shorter.

I got all of the sliding stuff loose today, something I'd
been pretty concerned about. However, as most things I do will defer to brute
force, and I'm a brute, sometimes, I got things started.

At the moment we're nearly finished with the gross alignment of the shaft in
the exit tube. Once we have that set, we'll go about making the face of the
coupler match up perfectly with the flange on the transmission.

As everything is entirely loose at the moment, I have little doubt that the
hard part is yet come, as every loose part has to be retightened, and every
time I do that, the alignment will change, slightly. However, I'll keep at it
(I'm known for patience), and as long as I've got it all loose, won't settle
for better than the .004 it was before (albeit, WAAAY off straight astern).

WooHoo!


================[reply]=======================


Poor Skippy!!! It sounds like your amateur attempt at alignment is doomed to
failure.

Why?

Because there is a lot more to alignment that just centering the shaft in the
log. A perfectly centered shaft can fail to be perfectly aligned with the
transmission output shaft/flange.

IOW, if the two flanges that bolt together are not perfectly parallel both top
to bottom and side to side and everywhere else, when the propeller shaft is
centered in the log there will be a terrible vibration set up as the two
flanges will bind and loosen as they rotate. The only way to get them perfect
is by using two dial gauges, one for each flange and as you rotate them with
perhaps an 18th inch of space between them (in neutral) by hand both gauges
must not move more than a blonde hair.

Sounds to me you are doing the job only halfway, Skippy.


Wilbur Hubbard


How in the world would a chap who's entire boating experience involves
a tiny plastic dinghy know anything about aligning an inboard
installed engine and drive line?

Easy.... he read it inna book and without other knowledge he professes
to be an expert. Stupidity knows no bounds, apparently.

Had you read the message, and had you an 8th grade command of English
you would note the paragraph in which the O.P. states "At the moment
we're nearly finished with the gross alignment of the shaft in
the exit tube. Once we have that set, we'll go about making the face
of the coupler match up perfectly with the flange on the
transmission."

But, as the Old Folks said, "stupid does as stupid does", and Willie
provides living proof that they were right.