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"Wilbur Hubbard" wrote in
anews.com: "Ian Malcolm" wrote in message ... "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote in anews.com: 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 BullPucky! Its simple enough to get them dead in line with a feeler gauge between their faces. Simply rotate the two flanges together while checking the gaps at four points seperated by 90 degrees. (the measurement points rotate with the flanges). If they neither tighten or loosen on the gauge finger through a whole turn the angular alignment is 'dead nuts'. Sadly, that's only about half the picture. Just imaging the two shafts not being on the same centerline. Feeler gauges might indicate that the two flanges were parallel but there STILL would be binding due to the two flanges being off center - hence the need to use dial gauges. Look at the illustrations, please. Maybe you're bright enough to understand what I'm talking about. Like I said and I still maintain I said correctly, Skippy is only doing HALF the job. And, apparently this also applies to you as well. http://www.hellersolutions.com/C350/...llManual10.pdf Wilbur Hubbard Well have you got any reputable reference for marine engine shaft alignment using two dial gauges? Your link above uses feeler gauges. Also what about static shaft deflection due to its own weight and the weight of the half coupling? I'd be interested to hear your version of how to compensate for it in practice. -- Ian Malcolm. London, ENGLAND. (NEWSGROUP REPLY PREFERRED) ianm[at]the[dash]malcolms[dot]freeserve[dot]co[dot]uk [at]=@, [dash]=- & [dot]=. *Warning* HTML & 32K emails -- NUL |
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