Changing the pitch on a prop 1980 Hunter 30

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J

Jim Bellesbach

I am replacing my two blade prop with a three blade prop. It requires a 13' prop with an 11 pitch. My prop specialist has a 13X13 and said he can change the pith to 13X11. Is it common to change the pitch of blades or should I keep looking?
 
Sep 9, 2005
61
- - St Joseph, MI
Changing Pitch

This is a common practice when a seller would like to get rid of some dead inventory vs ordering the "right" thing. I've heard of it before. It is easy to do with bronze, but the problem is that the pitch starts at the hub and moves out the blade in a very smooth curve making it easy for water passing over the surface to maintain laminar flow. The pitch is constant from the hub to the tip. When re-pitched, a twist is induced into the blade creating sharper bends. The pitch will no longer be constant over the entire length and may induce cavitation due to the loss of laminar flow over a small portion of the blade. I would ask him to order a new blade for me.
 
Sep 9, 2005
61
- - St Joseph, MI
correction

In the last sentence of my response, I meant to say prop instead of blade, sorry.
 
Nov 26, 2006
381
Hunter 31 1987 Fly Creek Marina Fairhope,AL.
pitch and dia

my hunter 30 came with a 2 blade 13x10 but previous owner installed a 3 blade 14x12 which gave it some push and a lot of prop walk. Unfortunately , that much prop just loaded down the engine which is not good for diesels. I found a local prop shop that took 2 inches off the dia and it works well. he finished wheel was a 3 blade 12x10 which gave me back my rpm's and still get hull speed. good luck, Charles Creel www.sailingmobile.com
 

Grizz

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Jan 13, 2006
179
Hunter 28.5 Park Ridge, IL
Props, hulls and engines

This topic came into play yesterday in a Mack Boring seminar, the jist being that prop manufacturors are in business to sell props and engine manufacturers build engines to be sold in boats to achieve specific 'full load' rpms for that specific model/design boat...which a diesel engine needs. Chuck alluded to the down-side of this with his 'loading the engine' reference. Lots of negatives begin to cascade if you can't get your engine to operating rpms because the prop won't let you. Yesterday's take-away information was that if you're considering changing to a prop different than OEM, make sure the engine manufacturer has a chance to provide input prior to purchase. Prop manufacturers are akin to barbers, who if asked "do I need a haircut?" [insert: do I need a new prop] will always answer "Sure you do!" I'll bet Yanmar has a stack of Service alerts on this topic, if that's who built your power plant. Check with them or your local dealer. Good luck w/ your investigation!
 
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