Bronlonius
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2012
- Messages
- 145
I now have a working tach and correct motor height, so I'd like to get the optimum prop. (Thanks Sea Rider for the recommendation on a hardline tach, it works great).
Here's what I have right now:
Boat: 12' tracker V12 lite. Has a casting deck in the front, battery and 2 3gal gas tanks in the front.
Outboard: 1996 Nissan NS9.9D converted to 15HP. Outboard is on a jack plate, and dialed in at about 1" above the keel.
11 pitch stainless prop:
with 1 person: 5100 RPM @ WOT, roughly 20mph (GPS reading is hard to get on my lake for some reason, but it's generally been between 19mph and 20.5 when it works).
The boat has great performance with one person, but takes a while to plane with 2. I haven't gotten a tach reading with 2 people in the boat yet, but it's quite obvious that the prop has too much pitch for the extra weight of another person.
What I'm hoping for is to get a prop that brings the WOT RPMs to the max (5500) with one person, and is still able to have enough torque to plane the boat with 2 people. So assuming 200 RPM per inch of pitch, I think a 9 pitch prop would be ideal.
Questions:
1. Stainless vs. Aluminum - Am I correct that a stainless prop is essentially the equivalent of one pitch above if I get an aluminum prop? (i.e. a 9 pitch stainless is going to give the similar WOT RPM as a 10 pitch aluminum). Is stainless worth it on such a small outboard?
2. Am I better off getting 2 different props(Keep the 11 pitch stainless one for just me, and get one for 2 people/loaded) or am I going to be able to get away with having one that is a happy medium?
3. If I do end up with 2 different props.... are there any props that have a swappable hub system that would make changing props for different loads a quick and easy thing? (Yeah, I know it's just a cotter pin and a nut, but it always seems to take forever to get that cotter pin back in there.
Here's what I have right now:
Boat: 12' tracker V12 lite. Has a casting deck in the front, battery and 2 3gal gas tanks in the front.
Outboard: 1996 Nissan NS9.9D converted to 15HP. Outboard is on a jack plate, and dialed in at about 1" above the keel.
11 pitch stainless prop:
with 1 person: 5100 RPM @ WOT, roughly 20mph (GPS reading is hard to get on my lake for some reason, but it's generally been between 19mph and 20.5 when it works).
The boat has great performance with one person, but takes a while to plane with 2. I haven't gotten a tach reading with 2 people in the boat yet, but it's quite obvious that the prop has too much pitch for the extra weight of another person.
What I'm hoping for is to get a prop that brings the WOT RPMs to the max (5500) with one person, and is still able to have enough torque to plane the boat with 2 people. So assuming 200 RPM per inch of pitch, I think a 9 pitch prop would be ideal.
Questions:
1. Stainless vs. Aluminum - Am I correct that a stainless prop is essentially the equivalent of one pitch above if I get an aluminum prop? (i.e. a 9 pitch stainless is going to give the similar WOT RPM as a 10 pitch aluminum). Is stainless worth it on such a small outboard?
2. Am I better off getting 2 different props(Keep the 11 pitch stainless one for just me, and get one for 2 people/loaded) or am I going to be able to get away with having one that is a happy medium?
3. If I do end up with 2 different props.... are there any props that have a swappable hub system that would make changing props for different loads a quick and easy thing? (Yeah, I know it's just a cotter pin and a nut, but it always seems to take forever to get that cotter pin back in there.