If you're relying on the parts to seize together for strength, you're in the wrong business.You want that coupling to seize together with the shaft.
Some people actually have to work for a living. (poor souls) It's only been 14 hours since he posted. We'll give him some time.It looks like the OP is a ghost
Honestly, straight couplings are not a great system IMO. That's why they're used on low horsepower applications. From an engineering perspective, I totally agree with you; but that's not really how a straight coupling works. I upgraded to a Sigmadrive reason for this reason. I found the "engineering" of a straight coupling lacking.If you're relying on the parts to seize together for strength, you're in the wrong business.
If the shaft key and set screws don't give you a factor of safety of 20+, it's time to dump the whole assembly and start again.
Don't make life impossible for the next poor guy (it may even be you) who has to take the flange(s) off. This is the first sign of a good millwright.
Damn Auto-correctWhat is the consensus on applying some kind of anti-freeze on the propeller shaft prior to reinstalling the shaft coupling?
Any ideas, suggestions or opinions?
With what it takes to get off in the first place, adding an anti-freeze may assist in removal if needed in the future.
That statement is going to take one hell of a pile of analysis to convince me how the shear strength of a shaft key is going to be reduced by introducing a contact surface of anti-sieze.You can make the argument that some kind of lubricant, anti-seize, whatever will help the corrosion issue, but ultimately you're taking away from the capacity of the coupling to transfer torque to the shaft.
To use your words, if I may, spending a good portion of my life in refineries looking over the shoulders of people working on these couplings up to 100 HP revealed how the professionals do it. Tight fittings on these couplings DO NOT FAIL.From an engineering perspective
Care to calculate the opposing torque due to the shaft key in shear compared to the frictional shear force of the "seized shaft?"The key and the set screw end up taking the torque load instead of the interference fit as intended.
Interference fits are a very acceptable means to transmit power through shafts. I'm not arguing against that. My main point is, in this particular application (a recreational sailboat), there are better ways to accomplish this, and that if you're going to use the straight-shaft system, it's best to keep anti-seize out of the equation when you're fitting the coupling back on the shaft. I'm also saying that, in my opinion, the system isn't really all that robust for this application, and it's best to leave it alone and let it seize together. Use a flange puller like the one I linked above to get it off again next time around and it will work out.The OP's question dealt with anti-seize on a straight coupling. FULL STOP. Nothing about coupling construction.
Statements like this from your linked article do nothing to clarify the situation :
View attachment 221916
No thought about how an interference fitting does in fact go together with anti-seize between the surfaces if the same anti-seize is supposed to keep these same surfaces even further apart. Something wrong with the thought process here.
That statement is going to take one hell of a pile of analysis to convince me how the shear strength of a shaft key is going to be reduced by introducing a contact surface of anti-sieze.
To use your words, if I may, spending a good portion of my life in refineries looking over the shoulders of people working on these couplings up to 100 HP revealed how the professionals do it. Tight fittings on these couplings DO NOT FAIL.
And looking at typical sailboat shaft couplings, and using your "engineering perspective" I am more than satisfied that a properly fitted straight coupling is more that adequate to absorb the applied torque without coming loose.
And finally, I know you'll want to retract this when you read it again :
Care to calculate the opposing torque due to the shaft key in shear compared to the frictional shear force of the "seized shaft?"
1. Do you know what an interference fitting is ?If the press-fit/interference-fit isn't on point, the screw/shear key safety situation isn't really designed to take the forces I'm describing above for an extended period of time.