Saildrive has 280 hours on it, model 130S-B cable engages shifter fine. There was no warning, it was working fine shifted into neutral and could not re engage it forward or reverse. Any input would be appreciated.
Well that is odd. Don't rule out galvanic corrosion eroding the prop nut and then having the prop spin off or even corrode away.Thanks for the responses. Update, took a dive under the boat and no propeller? How we lost the prop while anchored is a mystery.
There is no prop metalic nut as there is on a conventional shaft and strut system. A sail drive is very similar to the leg of an outboard but much more robust. On the sail drive shaft, there is a prop cone made of a composite material that screws on to the shaft and a stainless steel fastener that threads into the shaft.Well that is odd. Don't rule out galvanic corrosion eroding the prop nut and then having the prop spin off or even corrode away.
It's a saildrive. That's all you need to know.How we lost the prop while anchored is a mystery.
There is no prop metalic nut as there is on a conventional shaft and strut system. A sail drive is very similar to the leg of an outboard but much more robust. On the sail drive shaft, there is a prop cone made of a composite material that screws on to the shaft and a stainless steel fastener that threads into the shaft.
View attachment 207825
This is an image of the older version of the cone kit. The installation instructions had you use a special insert T2 (priced at $150 USD and unobtainable by me) on a suitable torque wrench block the prop with a piece of wood and torque to 125Nm. The fastener tightened into the shaft to 23Nm. The new design now has a nut on the end of the cone that you can get an everyday torque wrench onto and torque to 70Nm The instructions also tell you to put the transmission into reverse and to use a thread locker. The kit even comes with Loctite Red-Gel.
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This is an image of the newer version of the cone kit.
Yanmar and Volvo use different attachment hardware. Also, if the prop that was lost was a folder or feathering prop, that's a whole 'nother ball of wax.Thanks. Are all sail drives similar or is this specific to this brand?
I wonder if insurance will cover the loss or if the company will say it was lack of maintenance.Yanmar and Volvo use different attachment hardware. Also, if the prop that was lost was a folder or feathering prop, that's a whole 'nother ball of wax.
If it was just a standard Volvo fixed-blade prop, the insurance deductible is likely more than the replacement cost.I wonder if insurance will cover the loss or if the company will say it was lack of maintenance.