J
Jay
We were just visiting our 306 to get it ready for launching, and I messed around with the packing nut on the stuffing box to tighten it up and reduce the drip. (Last time it was in the water, it was dripping at about 1 drip every 5-10 seconds with the engine stopped. Which I understand to be excessive.) Anyway, first I unscrewed the packing nut all the way, and it looked pretty simple it me, just as long as I'm really seeing what I think I'm seeing. So here are the (perhaps fairly dumb) questions:1) When I backed the packing nut all the way off, it looks like the packing is up inside the cup of the packing nut. Is this right? I sort of expected the packing to be inside the stuffing box (given the name), but it looked pretty clear to me that this was not the case.2) I then tightened the packing nut down by hand until it contacted the lock nut. At this point, I could still turn the prop shaft easily by hand (and the packing was no tighter than it had been before, which was the point), so I backed off the lock nut and tightened the packing nut quite a bit more by hand. Now the shaft could still be turned by hand, but with a bit more difficulty. I attempted to tighten the 2 nuts together with a wrench. Does this sound like a reasonable procedure? We were told to tighten the packing nut until the shaft was under some resistance, but could still be turned by hand.3) I read in the archives about Hunters with a plastic stuffing box on some boats. On our boat, the packing nut, lock nut, and stuffing box look to be bronze, but there is this 1 3/4" bit of rubber hose linking the stuffing box to the stern bearing. Is this what people are referring to as a "plastic stuffing box", or do they really mean that the housing the packing nut screws on to is made of plastic on some boats?Thanks for your input!Jay