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#1
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Greetings,
I've a 22' D&M sailboat. It weighs in at 4000 lbs with 2000 lbs of ballast. Right now, I have a Johnson 15hp motor with a 20inch shaft on the transom. The boat floats pretty much on its lines. I'm experiencing a lot of cavitation when underway in moderate seas (2-4 ft) and am wondering if this is standard for an outboard powered sailboat or if perhaps I need a longer engine shaft. Also, would moving the tilt pin forward or backward help? Any thoughts or comments would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Nelson |
#2
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Subject: Cavitation
From: Nelson Kirsch Greetings, I've a 22' D&M sailboat. It weighs in at 4000 lbs with 2000 lbs of ballast. Right now, I have a Johnson 15hp motor with a 20inch shaft on the transom. The boat floats pretty much on its lines. I'm experiencing a lot of cavitation when underway in moderate seas (2-4 ft) and am wondering if this is standard for an outboard powered sailboat or if perhaps I need a longer engine shaft. Also, would moving the tilt pin forward or backward help? Any thoughts or comments would be greatly appreciated. Your experiencing airation which is not uncommon in that type of boat. It sounds like you need a longer engine shaft. Or a way to lower the outboard you already have. Capt. Bill |
#3
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Hello Nelson,
First let's get the correct terminology. What you most likely have is prop ventilation, where surface or exhaust gas enters the prop stream and reduces the thrust. Cavitation is the boiling of water on the low pressure side of a prop under very high thrust conditions, often damaging the prop. This doesn't happen on low hp motors. see: http://www.powerboat-training.co.uk/...rs-ventilation ,%20cavitation.htm Look for a way to get the motor lower in the water, usually by moving its bracket, assuming its tiller still has room above the transom. Otherwise you need a longer shaft. Normally the motor is best set for zero tilt....prop shaft horizontal. Brent www.bensonsails.com From: Nelson Kirsch Organization: AT&T Worldnet Newsgroups: rec.boats.cruising Date: Thu, 04 Sep 2003 13:08:39 GMT Subject: Cavitation Greetings, I've a 22' D&M sailboat. It weighs in at 4000 lbs with 2000 lbs of ballast. Right now, I have a Johnson 15hp motor with a 20inch shaft on the transom. The boat floats pretty much on its lines. I'm experiencing a lot of cavitation when underway in moderate seas (2-4 ft) and am wondering if this is standard for an outboard powered sailboat or if perhaps I need a longer engine shaft. Also, would moving the tilt pin forward or backward help? Any thoughts or comments would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Nelson |
#4
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Nelson Kirsch wrote:
Greetings, I've a 22' D&M sailboat. It weighs in at 4000 lbs with 2000 lbs of ballast. Right now, I have a Johnson 15hp motor with a 20inch shaft on the transom. The boat floats pretty much on its lines. I'm experiencing a lot of cavitation when underway in moderate seas (2-4 ft) and am wondering if this is standard for an outboard powered sailboat or if perhaps I need a longer engine shaft. Also, would moving the tilt pin forward or backward help? Any thoughts or comments would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Nelson If the prop is lifting out of the water in those conditions, you'll want to lower the motor mount or get a longer shaft, but 20" is already pretty long. Cavitation, depending on what exactly you're experiencing, could be because the prop's not down far enough and surface air is being drawn in, or possibly that you're simply trying to drive the boat too fast, or that you have too aggressive a prop. Your engine is nearly as powerful as ours, you're half our weight and we only use about 5 hp at cruise power (5.5-5.8 knots, depending on the conditions). If you're trying to keep to that sort of speed, you might be pushing against hull speed. As another scenerio: We have an inboard and the prop and engine are just about perfectly matched to the boat, but we've been stopped twice by boat wakes or waves and the prop cavitated: Spun in its own air pocket (or something) and didn't have any real connection to the water. Had to throttle back for a second to re-establish thrust. Under normal conditions, we could pull stumps with our 16"x10 3 blade prop (had to, once), so I doubt there's anything we can do to prevent that. -- Jere Lull Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD) Xan's Pages: http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
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