Pulling a prop

Oct 24, 2010
2,405
Hunter 30 Everett, WA
Okay, I need to pull the prop to install a new strut and to check the shaft for runout. I tried to borrow a prop puller from our local supplier (Harbor Marine) but someone already borrowed it and didn't return it. No problem I will go to the local steel place to get materials and build one. Oops, it's Saturday. I guess it's a Monday project.

Now I'm wondering, what do you use to pull a fixed 2 blade prop?

I know I can build one with a torch, some 1/2 inch plate and a few bolts and nuts. It just seems like this is too common to not have an easily available tool.

Ken
 
Feb 10, 2004
4,232
Hunter 40.5 Warwick, RI
I have one I made for my 12-7 two blade prop on my Morgan 30. It is surplus to my needs. You can have it for the shipping. As you said, 1/2" steel plate and a couple big bolts. If you are interested, I can take a picture and post.
 
Jan 11, 2014
13,993
Sabre 362 113 Fair Haven, NY
Have you tried a gear puller? Probably find one at an auto parts store. The shaft is tapered, so once it starts to move, it should come right off, unless it doesn't.

If the shaft is bronze there is a chance that it has become once with the shaft. It was ugly. Now I have a nice 1" bronze rod in my garage.
 

RoyS

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Jun 3, 2012
1,742
Hunter 33 Steamboat Wharf, Hull, MA
You should be able to buy a generic wheel puller in an auto parts store or sears tools. For a two blade fixed prop you will need two arm model.
IMG_0923.JPG
 

DougM

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Jul 24, 2005
2,242
Beneteau 323 Manistee, MI
I have used a gear puller like the one shown by RoyS. It works well.
Note that the prop shaft on my boat is stainless steel and not bronze, which may or may not make a difference.
 
Sep 25, 2008
7,686
Alden 50 Sarasota, Florida
Two essential tools - a prop/gear puller and heat ( torch). The physics of thermal expansion is your friend.
 
Jan 7, 2011
5,906
Oday 322 East Chicago, IN
My Bother-in-law made me some tools to assist in removing the cutlass bearing and my prop. As you said, some plate and some bolts do the trick. He is a real craftsman, so mine are a little nicer than if I tried to make them!



Greg
 
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Oct 24, 2010
2,405
Hunter 30 Everett, WA
I have one I made for my 12-7 two blade prop on my Morgan 30. It is surplus to my needs. You can have it for the shipping. As you said, 1/2" steel plate and a couple big bolts. If you are interested, I can take a picture and post.
Great offer, but I figure I can build one faster than I can have it shipped. Thanks.

Ken
 
Mar 29, 2017
576
Hunter 30t 9805 littlecreek
I use chain with the same gear puller as shown. Just get longer bolts to go thru puller and chain
 
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Aug 2, 2005
1,155
Pearson 33-2 & Typhoon 18 Seneca Lake
Tapping perpendicular to the shaft can help with a stubborn prop. Two hammers required....One as the tapper and one as the brace on the opposite side of the shaft. Don't just bash it. Tapping is the way to proceed. This might be done while the gear puller is in place and applying force. Beware of too much force with either the tapping hammer or with the gear puller! How do I know? Back in my younger days I expected the prop to yield if I applied enough turns on the gear puller. Well.....The threaded tip of our bronze shaft bent. Didn't do that again.
 
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capta

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Jun 4, 2009
5,072
Pearson 530 Admiralty Bay, Bequia SVG
Once you have everything under pressure from the puller, apply a bit of heat to the prop's hub and it should literally jump right off the shaft. Note the wise person above who said to leave the nut on the end of the shaft a couple of threads, so your prop won't go damaging itself after it's attempt at flight.
 
Oct 24, 2010
2,405
Hunter 30 Everett, WA
Ken, where do you plan to pull the prop?
In Everett WA. I don't anticipate a problem and have done this before. I was just surprised that someone would borrow a tool for a few minute job and not return it. I guess it shouldn't be a surprise. I also built a puller for a folding prop and left it with them to loan a few years ago, but it's also gone. It seems silly to hang on to a tool that's free to use and rarely used by most of us.

Here we go again. What I have in mind now is building one that can handle a prop or a flange. I'll likely leave it with them for loan again once I'm finished.

Ken
 
Aug 22, 2017
1,609
Hunter 26.5 West Palm Beach
Sometimes heat is your friend. Sometimes cold is your friend. brass & aluminum alloys usually expand roughly twice as fast as steel for the same change in temperature. Stainless is usually roughly in the middle of those two. If you have a stainless female with a bronze male inside, then you want dry ice, not a torch to loosen them, unless you can apply heat fast enough so that the outer part expands before the inner part gets hot. If the materials are the same, or if the faster moving alloy is on the outside, then heat is your friend. When using dry ice, soak the whole assembly for about half an hour so that the cold gets to the center of the shaft. Rub a little grease on the parts first to prevent humidity from turning to ice & sticking to the parts.

When tapping on the stuck parts while applying pressure with a puller, you don't need to hit the parts all that hard. You just need to get them ringing. The vibration is what you are looking for. When the parts have been in dry ice, the benefits of ringing them are amplified.

& +1 on leaving that nut on there. When a stuck taper shaft lets loose, it lets loose all at once.

https://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/linear-expansion-coefficients-d_95.html
 
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