Derek, Your method works well but I would add
this idea. After applying tension on the puller, strike the head of the bolt on the puller itself. Once the puller has good tension on it a small tap on the puller center bolt will spring the prop off faster and earlier than striking anywhere else. I always use a brass hammer when using any one of my different pullers. Striking anywhere else could damage parts you want to keep.The measure of tension on the puller before rapping is a good strong pull on a 10" box end wrench while holding the prop in your free hand. If it doesn't spring lose then re-tension and rap again. Repeat until it pops loose.If you over tighten the puller bolt trying to free the prop (without striking the center bolt) you will cause the puller center bolt to start to go sideways and ruin the puller and screw up the prop shaft threads. The time spent getting the puller set up equally on all legs is what makes this job easy and doesn't ruin expensive parts.RayS/V Speedy