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Jere Lull wrote:
In article , Peter Hendra wrote: I have an engine alignment problem in that when my engine was taken out of the boat in Port Sudan in the Red Sea, the mechanics who were not marine engineers did not align it properly when they reinstalled it. At lower revs it vibrates somewhat. It has four flexi-mounts that are bolted to two longtitudinal engine bearers and each is connected to the engine by a vertical threaded bolt. I would be very grateful if someone in the group could advise me the sequence or process of aligning it again. The yacht is now out of the water. The engine is a 37HP Nanni diesel with a "V" drive with a plastic flexicoupling between the gearbox plate and the propellor shaft plate. You'll have to wait until the boat's back in the water, the rig is properly tensioned and things have settled for awhile. Then it's an iterative process of getting the height and angle closer and closer, eventually winding up with the shaft in the center of the shaft log and the drive plate exactly parallel on each axis. Then lock the mounts down. recheck and bolt the shaft together. Take the plastic piece out as you measure of course. It'll smooth things if you're a bit off, but you don't want to have it always flexing. You must align the engine and prop shaft by adjusting the mounts as above so that the engine and prop shaft are pointing in the same direction, at the same height and lateral alignment. Additionally, you need to ensure that the prop shaft is aligned before you align the engine to it. First, make certain you do not have a bent shaft or warped prop. Most prop shafts can be wiggled around somewhat and you need to ensure that it is true and centered first. Keep in mind that on many boats the prop shaft and engine is set off to one side by possibly 1/8 of an inch to compensate for prop walk while proceeding straight ahead. All inboard propellors will vibrate at some speed, because of interference between the hull, the flow of water and the prop. After it is all set up, next time you yank the engine, consider unbolting the engine mounts themselves from the engine bed and pulling the whole works without disturbing the adjustment of the mounts, still attached to the engine. Worked for me because the mounts come out and can then be detached from the engine and reattached with little or no movement using the original holes, etc. Loose mounting holes, worn from repeated re-installation, are caused by improperly re-inserting threaded fasteners into holes without regard for cross threading. A screw should be turned backwards until the threads are percieved to 'click' into the established threads. Few workmen bother with this, and holes become sloppy, requiring filling and re-tapping. Some loose holes may be snugged up with heli-coils, or by coating the screw with wax and then filling the hole somewhat with epoxy, and then re-inserting. Improperly done, this can be a disasater if they need removing in the future. To assist, you must find or make some reference marks on the boat and then align the prop shaft and engine to the same spatial relationship, using the reference marks on the boat and measurements of the prop shaft and of the transmission shaft, using feeler gauges between the drive flanges. These are precise measurements to be sure, and while non too easy, are certainly not impossible. The alternative is to make adjustments underway, "tuning" the alignment for minimum vibration. Working around rotating machinery is very hazardous. You would make the adjustments at the worst vibrating rpms, taking note of eccentricities, possibly using a strobe light keyed to the ignition or some mark on the flywheel, or using a runout gague. Do not do this! A friend of mine would use the approach of loosening all the setscrew and then running the ******* hard and fiddling with it until it settled in or broke, then resetting the screws. I do not reccommend this, as in about half of the cases it would promptly fly into pieces. In the other half , it would take longer to fall apart. Sooner or later, he will lose an arm. My father in law, God rest his soul, a Canadian veteran of Holland, an old time horseman, woodsman and a farmer, would buy a bushel of parts, bolt them together loosely with locking wire, let it shake, and replace pieces whenever they broke. Many of our farms are run this way and while farmers survive somehow, there are many casualties. He is also reputed to have welded a steering knuckle on his tractor, using the starting battery, a jumper cable and a coat hangar. It got him home. He was scary in other ways, too. Good luck. Terry K |
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