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Steel v aluminum prop?
My small boat has steel, my large boat has aluminum and my old cruiser had brass. The steel looks pretty and is less prone to damage (it can tear up the lower end instead) and the aluminum is more prone to wear and is waddable if you hit something, obviously the steel is a lot more expensive than the pot metal ones, but what really is the advantage of the steel really if any? Brass seemed to be in the middle somewhere. Can you still get brass props for runabouts anymore?
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Steel v aluminum prop?
Tim wrote:
My small boat has steel, my large boat has aluminum and my old cruiser had brass. The steel looks pretty and is less prone to damage (it can tear up the lower end instead) and the aluminum is more prone to wear and is waddable if you hit something, obviously the steel is a lot more expensive than the pot metal ones, but what really is the advantage of the steel really if any? Brass seemed to be in the middle somewhere. Can you still get brass props for runabouts anymore? Steel are more efficient. You can have a thinner blade, better profile. My jet drive has stainless impellers. Pump gravel better. Have to take a grinder to them once in a while if running shallow gravel rivers. Sand just polishes the blades. |
Steel v aluminum prop?
Now that you mention it, the steel does have a better pitch to it . I suppose that's to get a better "screw" effect with less rpm?
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Steel v aluminum prop?
On Thu, 31 Jul 2014 10:07:44 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: Now that you mention it, the steel does have a better pitch to it . I suppose that's to get a better "screw" effect with less rpm? === I think that because steel is stronger than aluminun, they can build a prop with thinner blades that have less friction when turning through the water. |
Steel v aluminum prop?
Could be Wayne, but just on outward appearance the steel seems to have longer vanes with more pitch than the aluminum. Might be how it just looks though. But even so that could also be the advantage of using the stronger material
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Steel v aluminum prop?
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Steel v aluminum prop?
Why is that Wayne? Deterioration from salt?
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Steel v aluminum prop?
On Thu, 31 Jul 2014 11:46:14 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: Why is that Wayne? Deterioration from salt? === Thin water; inaccurate charts; jumping rocks; operator error; etc., etc. As Greg so succinctly put it, South West Florida is a place where the bottom can be very close to the top and vice versa. |
Steel v aluminum prop?
On Thursday, 31 July 2014 16:37:44 UTC-3, wrote:
On Thu, 31 Jul 2014 14:38:12 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Thu, 31 Jul 2014 14:21:02 -0400, wrote: I seldom see anything with an aluminum prop around here unless it is on a motor you can carry. === I had an aluminum prop on our old runabout that we brought to Florida from Connecticut. We went through 3 or 4 props them our first year in the Cape. That bottom is pretty close to the top here isn't it ;-) When I bought my Harris in 1985, it had a beat up old aluminum prop on it and the first thing I did was replace it with stainless. I start getting nervous when the water drops to 6'. I feel much better with 100' below my nice painted hull. ;-) |
Steel v aluminum prop?
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Steel v aluminum prop?
On Thursday, July 31, 2014 10:31:54 PM UTC-4, True North wrote:
On Thursday, 31 July 2014 16:37:44 UTC-3, wrote: On Thu, 31 Jul 2014 14:38:12 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Thu, 31 Jul 2014 14:21:02 -0400, wrote: I seldom see anything with an aluminum prop around here unless it is on a motor you can carry. === I had an aluminum prop on our old runabout that we brought to Florida from Connecticut. We went through 3 or 4 props them our first year in the Cape. That bottom is pretty close to the top here isn't it ;-) When I bought my Harris in 1985, it had a beat up old aluminum prop on it and the first thing I did was replace it with stainless. I start getting nervous when the water drops to 6'. I feel much better with 100' below my nice painted hull. ;-) You mean that corroded Bass Boat....... Pahahahahahahaahahahah |
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