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In E3m0f.78$784.41@lakeread08 "Glenn Ashmore" writes:
"Lauri Tarkkonen" wrote in message ... Any reason Autoprop is not on your list? Price? I had a two bladed Gori, and think this is perhaps the best two bladed folding prop. But when I wanted to change to a three bladed feathering prop, I ended up with j-prop: http://www.bomon.com/jprop/. I have been very happy with the performance and here in Europe it is much cheaper than the competition. There is one question you should pay attention to: If your gearbox has not about the same reduction ratio of revs on both the forward and backwards gear, then you better to get an feathering prop that can be adjusted to different angle of attack of the blades on forward and reverse. I know J-prop does not have this, but only a few have. It is possible maxprop has. AutoProp is a neat idea but I eliminated it for a couple of reasons. First it is not truly feathering. The blades hang loose when idle and produce some drag which can make them rotate. The other is that it relies on 3 races of exposed ball bearings that I am afraid can get caked up with barnacle cement and other trash. If your propeller axis is not perfectly horizontal the three bladed feathering propeller will vause some drag. I have not heard about the problem of Autoprop would rotate, but if you put your gear on, I am sure it will not. I have been asking people who have Autoprops, when I have seen them working on their boats, but even if there have been some barnacles on the prop, nobody admitted that it has affected the rotation of the blades. Of course most people I have met are in the Baltic, where the barnacle problem is not that big. I had not thought of the J-prop but I will look at them. The 3 bladed Gori and MaxProp are near the top of my list. If you have to fix the angle of the blades differently for forward and reverse then MaxProp is yours, if it can be symmetric J-prop comes much cheaper (at least here in Finland). If you choose a Gori, you should check the vedge that locks the propeller in the axis. Earlier they were made of brass, and I know a couple of cases, my own boat included where the vedge has been split into two and the propeller has fallen off. (They could not find it in the mud of the harbour bottom. :-)). Use steel. - Lauri Tarkkonen -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
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