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I thought Skippy had a "21' Bilgeliner?
Fredo "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Skipper wrote: Doug Kanter wrote: Just sort of lurking in this conversation, but if a stainless prop and an aluminum one were exactly the same dimensionally, why would one perform differently than the other? Friction differences due to surface characteristics? Stainless steel is STIFFER than the aluminum prop and will outperform it. Also, aluminum props ding up much easier than steel props. Stainless is the way to go. -- Skipper Identically dimensioned aluminum and stainless props will perform about the same under identical circumstances for most boaters. If you are pushing a 21' fishboat with a 200 hp outboard, and you have two props, one alum and the other stainless, and they have the same pitch, diameter and blade geometry, the performance will be about the same. Different cup design, very high speed boat, et cetera, and thinner blades available on a stainless prop might make a difference. What would an ersatz Skipper know when the real Skipper never owned a boat? |