SeaKaye12
Lieutenant Junior Grade
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2005
- Messages
- 1,108
Hi,
When prop-shops alter a prop's pitch, is there some typical way that they mark the prop to indicate what changes were made?
Here's what prompts the question:
I have a 1977 Mercury 850 on a rather heavy 16' Tri-Hull. When I first got the combo a couple of years ago; it had no prop (stolen...) So; I purchased a 17P Prop (48-32264-17) from a respected poster here and have been running it. However, even with just me in the boat...I could only get about 5200 RPM WOT. So; last spring I purchased (on e-bay) a 15P prop (48-32390A3-15) Oddly; with that one on there...I can't get past 5000.
Maybe the 15P is not really a 15P??? When I got it; it had a sticker on it indicating that it had been rebuilt/repaired by a prop-shop.
Anyone have any comment? I guess that someday I should quit using junk props and buy something new that cab be properly identified.
Thanks for reading, Chuck
When prop-shops alter a prop's pitch, is there some typical way that they mark the prop to indicate what changes were made?
Here's what prompts the question:
I have a 1977 Mercury 850 on a rather heavy 16' Tri-Hull. When I first got the combo a couple of years ago; it had no prop (stolen...) So; I purchased a 17P Prop (48-32264-17) from a respected poster here and have been running it. However, even with just me in the boat...I could only get about 5200 RPM WOT. So; last spring I purchased (on e-bay) a 15P prop (48-32390A3-15) Oddly; with that one on there...I can't get past 5000.
Maybe the 15P is not really a 15P??? When I got it; it had a sticker on it indicating that it had been rebuilt/repaired by a prop-shop.
Anyone have any comment? I guess that someday I should quit using junk props and buy something new that cab be properly identified.
Thanks for reading, Chuck