Lenny and Louise
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 2, 2013
- Messages
- 166
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-302 C
- Vessel Name
- Then Again
Then Again is located on Hayden Island, Portland, in the Columbia River. She is in a berth in a marina facing upstream into a current that ranges from three to over five knots, depending upon what is being released at the Bonneville Damn. Over the weekend, I realized that the propeller shaft sometimes turns in response to the current. This is a new phenomenon, and I always approach machinery with the twin questions, “What changed and why?”
But more important than the philosophical questions is this: How do I make it stop?
It rotates after the engine has been run. If I stop it by applying friction to the shaft (as with the sole of a shoe) it tends to stay stopped. But I do not know if it starts again after I leave and stops before I return. Someone suggested shutting the engine off while still in gear, and I have done this with no appreciable result. (Nor did I expect this to have much effect, given the hydraulic transmission and so on.)
Others have suggested that this is normal and shows that the boat is well built with good shaft alignment, proper action of the cutlass bearing and so on. Nonetheless, I am worried that as far as the cutlass bearing, the shaft, and the bearings in the reduction gear are concerned, I am going ahead at 3 to 5 knots around the clock. That amounts to a lot of hours. And I don’t know what the effect is on the gears in the transmission.
Then Again is R25SC, new in August 2001, with the Volvo D3-150 engine. There are about 68 hours on the clock.
How do the rest of you good folks stop your shaft when moored or anchored in a current?
But more important than the philosophical questions is this: How do I make it stop?
It rotates after the engine has been run. If I stop it by applying friction to the shaft (as with the sole of a shoe) it tends to stay stopped. But I do not know if it starts again after I leave and stops before I return. Someone suggested shutting the engine off while still in gear, and I have done this with no appreciable result. (Nor did I expect this to have much effect, given the hydraulic transmission and so on.)
Others have suggested that this is normal and shows that the boat is well built with good shaft alignment, proper action of the cutlass bearing and so on. Nonetheless, I am worried that as far as the cutlass bearing, the shaft, and the bearings in the reduction gear are concerned, I am going ahead at 3 to 5 knots around the clock. That amounts to a lot of hours. And I don’t know what the effect is on the gears in the transmission.
Then Again is R25SC, new in August 2001, with the Volvo D3-150 engine. There are about 68 hours on the clock.
How do the rest of you good folks stop your shaft when moored or anchored in a current?