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View Full Version : changing propeller rake?



fs5
01-12-2013, 01:01 PM
is it possible to change the rake of a propeller?
thaks.

phillnjack
01-13-2013, 05:06 PM
Surely to change rake you would have to take the blades off and weld them back on !!!!
or get say a 15 inch diameter prop and have it taken down to about 12 to alter the rake.

Sounds like something a specialist may be able to do ,but would probably cost twice what a new
prop would, as need to do more than twice the normal work on the prop.

ofcourse i might be wrong, but isnt rake the angle of the blade attached to the hub ?????


phill....

Fast Fred
01-13-2013, 06:16 PM
i've never heard of changin the rake, pitch yes. just so we're talkin about the same thing, Rake is the angle that the blade leans back from straight up and down.
like a sail boat prop has zero rake at what ever pitch, no lean, looks like a fan.:cool:

Fast Fred
01-13-2013, 06:35 PM
cup goes along way on that style hull in your avitar fs5

phillnjack
01-13-2013, 07:17 PM
Yeah fast fred your right.
Rake is blade angle from hub.
it would definitely be a challenge ha ha ha
probably been done on very exotic stuff where originals aint around anymore.


phill

Mark75H
01-13-2013, 07:35 PM
Yes rake can be slightly altered ... just like pitch. Neither can be altered very much on any particular prop.

Fast Fred
01-13-2013, 08:00 PM
is the gain in rake the out come of like addin more pitch or cup, or is it outright spank 10 more deg' into it, from say 30 to 40 deg'?

Mark75H
01-13-2013, 08:12 PM
Yeah, like adding cup

fs5
01-14-2013, 08:43 PM
thanks for the replies,i need a bit more rake to hold the bow up a bit.i wasn't sure either if you could just change it like the pitch.
the cleaver i'm running is one of ron's 11x20p over hub props.it has very little cup on it so i might try that first.

phillnjack
01-15-2013, 04:40 AM
so you need to have all the blades bent or taken off and replanted /
i could understand this with maybe an ali prop as the heat could help bend the blades, but to do a stainless
i would of thought would be very difficult and very dangerous,especially with a moulded prop,and expensive.

be interesting to hear what a prop maker would say about this .

phill

Fastjeff57
01-17-2013, 08:47 AM
..."Surely to change rake you would have to take the blades off and weld them back on "

Yeah.... That's how I'm forced to make them for my Franken Mercs. Mr. Hill would gasps at doing it that way, but...

jeff

phillnjack
01-17-2013, 11:12 AM
I dont think people realise that when a cast prop is cut through you can see material that is not exactly uniform.
it dont matter who makes them, if they are cast there Will be a certain amount of flaw in the material.
Now to take off a cast blade and change its rake it will have to be welded, the weld can be as strong in some
cases stronger than the original metal, but not the metal surrounding the weld.
This is where sometimes a repaired prop can fail, when the metal either side of the weld gives way due to
structure of the metal changing from its original cast process.
I can see its ok for a bit of the propeller being taken away, but to change the rake is to change the whole blade angle
not just the angle of the trailing edge.
This would also change the pitch completely and probably upset the whole way the blade works.

i dont think i would like to have a prop that has been through such a process unless it was done back at the
foundry where it was made.
They would be the only ones to understand the actual metalurgy of that particular propeller.

i think i would look for a different prop, as if your not happy with it now, you would have no way of knowing
what its gonna do once everything is completely changed.
and is it worth the risk of a dangerous propeller !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



phill....

Ron Hill
01-18-2013, 06:35 PM
I've actually never gone to Propeller School. O.F. Christner was one of the greatest outboard engine men of my time, but he called himself a welder. I frequently say, "I don't know that much about propellers! I do know if you get a good one, you keep it...You don't get a 'COPY' or one like it." We have recently spent almost 50 grand at Hill Marine Products trying to improve our already great Signature Propellers. We have known for quite sometimes, that of our propellers were better than others. For example, our 19 pitch Pleasure Five Blade will run the *** end off a Mirage 21 three blade. Out 19 is 2-3 MPH faster than a Mirage 21, holds the boat on plane better, keeps the boat on plane better and gets better gas mileage. Signature Pleasure 21 runs about the same as our 19, and planes slower. With our new machines we are getting so scientific we could go crazy!

Anyway, every propeller that Hill Marine makes and sells as Signature Propellers has been tested by either myself or my son, Chad Hill. The way we gets propellers to work, is with a hammer and grinders and test, test and test. My dad used lipstick on his props, we use a gps/computer....and "Seat of our pants". The hardest part for us has been once we find a very good propeller is making a very good copy. Our new scanner, has been doing some amazing stuff for us and CNC mills do some amazing mold making.

Getting to rake. I sold Rod ZaPF A 6 LITER INBOARD HYDRO PROPELLER PROBABLY 35 YEARS AGO. IT WAS A 19 SPLINE MERCURY CLEAVER WITH 15 DEGREES OF RAKE. GEORGE LOCKHART TOLD ROD HE COULD CHANGE THE RAKE TO 25 DEGREES. I told Rod to swend it to him, as I couldn't add 10 degrees of rake to that 15 degree rake prop. Well, when it came back it was 25 degrees. We looked it over and finally figured out that George had heated that prop to a very high temperature, then belt the blades. It was a beautiful job.

It wasn't long after that I started studying stainless steel and with the help of Tim Soares and his "ROSE BUD" tip on his torch, I started bending stainless steel every which way I could.

I started this post saying I'd never been to Propeller School and I haven't, but I define RAKE as the flat spot on the blade, when you straight edge goes through the middle of the prop shaft.

So, let's look at a couple of props:

1. Pictures 1,2 and 3...An old ZERO RAKE BRASS prop...As stated above somewhere, cup increases the rake... Flat part of the blade...zero degrees RAKE. Cupped are 10degree RAKE.

2. Pictures 4-5 Chopper, with 22 degrees of rake, roll the tip, goes to almost 30 degrees. Little boats usually need all the bow lift they can get, so I roll a bunch of RAKE in the blade...

3. Inboard three blade....Most inboard props, I see, just throw the water off the blade, I rolled this 11 X 15 left and it runs faster than almost every two blade inboard prop we've tested.

4. New "TOP SECRET" pitch gauge...$27,000 BUCKS WORTH........THIS MAY BE THE ONLY PICTURE OF THIS GAUGE, AS MY SON MAY KILL ME....

SO, CAN RAKE BE CHANGED? I MY OPINION, SURE! And you don't have to take the blade off to do it...

Fastjeff57
01-18-2013, 07:15 PM
Thanks for confirming what I have suspected about the effect of rake. You sure know props!

Jeff (the beginner)

phillnjack
01-18-2013, 07:19 PM
well the above statement seems a bit strange in many ways to me.
the way it reads is that by heating a blade you can just change the rake !!!!

well that dont exactly ring true.
Lets say a 13 inch diameter 21 pitch and 15 degrees of rake.

Now if you just heat the blade to change the rake where is the diameter comming from and the pitch !!!!!
the blade will obviously be totaly different from what it originaly was.
Blade area will surely be affected as well !!!!!!!!!!

By altering the rake you have to change each place the blade comes from(the hub) yes ?

So by heating the blade to the point of being able to bend it so much it would of structuraly changed the metal.
The metal takes on a certain hardness in the casting process, and re-heating will surely not keep its strength,
especially if its heated so much as to be almost liquified to change the rake.

Unless im not understanding the usa version of rake.

to me the rake is determined by where on the hub the blades are attached and where the tip of the blade is.
If a prop has its blade starting 1 inch back from rear of blade and is heated to take theis back further, the metal
must be molten metal to get to this state.
If a prop is cast it is molten metal to begin with, but by heating the metal a second time there is almost
an impossible chance of the metal ever being the same molecule structure from my understanding of metal and
its temper (hardness/flexibilty).

Every piece of metal that is cast will have a flaw somewhere,it might be very small and it could be pretty bad
depending on the care and metals used in the casting process.
But to weld a cast prop you can never tell how good the surrounding area is without x-raying the metal for the
porous state of the metal before and after the welding has taken place.

this is my view on welding cast metals, maybe ive been tought about welding and molten metals completely wrong.

just my opinion.

phill

Fastjeff57
01-18-2013, 07:27 PM
As cast stainless steel is not that hard, so heating it up will not remove much (if any) hardness. Unless overheated, the metal will return to its original state.

Jeff

phillnjack
01-18-2013, 07:37 PM
Ive just read the ron hill post above
it seems his version of propeller rake and my version of propeller rake are totally different.

All the prop books ive ever read and every picture ive ever seen about rake explains its the angle of the blades.
Nothing at all to do with cupping a blade.
cupping increases pitch not rake.
To put it in simple terms, Cupping to my mind is realy just a massive amount of pitch in a very small area on
the trailing edge of the blade.
this must be where some parts of the usa is totally different to the rest of the world.
obviously two different languages on props.
now you see why i said you have to take the blades of the hub, or atleast move them on the hub.


phill

phillnjack
01-18-2013, 07:49 PM
As cast stainless steel is not that hard, so heating it up will not remove much (if any) hardness. Unless overheated, the metal will return to its original state.

Jeff .................................

No that is wrong, as soon as you apply heat to any metal you will change its molecular structure,and hardness.
not always a dramatic amount,but it will change for sure.
Sometimes certain metals are taken to particular temperatures and then go through a hardening process.

Now if the stainless prop has not gone through any process of hardening the cutting edge just how good is it.


phill

Ron Hill
01-18-2013, 08:26 PM
I've been told, that stainless doesn't change much unless you heat it for a long time.

Pop Smith used to change my 6 3/4 Kamics to 7 inches by heating them an "DRAWING THEM". Pop ran a heat treating forge before he became THE MASTER PROPELLER MAKER. Pop Smith added a ton of rake to my runabout wheels, until I built my own boats. Then, I ran ZERO rake props.....I was fast a hell, but always out of control!

Like anything, getting your "DUCKS" lined up helps. If you have you pitch block ready, you heat the whole propeller and bend it, maybe with a press to the shape you want. If you figure you have changed the metal's structure, you can re heat treat.

I'm sorry my pictures weren't clearer, but holding the rake gauge, the prop and the camera ain't easy.

Pitch is how far a screw moves with one turn...(raise over run). Rake is the angle that the blade is in relationship to the hub. It has nothing to do with pitch!

ADD:

Most of the heat treating we do for propellers is to make them softer, not harder. As cast is about as hard as you get. Solution aneal/aging is to soft props. A soft prop has mor elongation, meaning it will bend before it breaks!

Bill Van Steenwyk
01-18-2013, 08:26 PM
I knew a guy one time, used to ask his wife for sex. When she would say yes, he would argue with her and tell her she really did not want any.

End result, he got very little of what he was asking for, especially when he called her stupid and thick for answering him.

He soon learned how to both ask her for a favor, and get what he asked for without offending or running the risk of being "cut off".

Powerabout
01-18-2013, 11:01 PM
Props are art
can you write a book on how to piant a masterpiece?
First theres a good prop, then there's science to try and work out why

Fastjeff57
01-19-2013, 05:18 AM
..."as soon as you apply heat to any metal you will change its molecular structure,and hardness.
not always a dramatic amount,but it will change for sure."

Like when it's cast, for example!

Unless heat treated, as cast stainless object is annealed, meaning it's as soft as it will get. Reheating it--for bending--will not make soft any softer! Nor will it wreck the grain structure UNLESS the metal is destructively overheated, as I explained.

Jeff (graduate mechanical engineer)

phillnjack
01-19-2013, 06:41 AM
Ok lets just go back a bit here

ron hill made this statement
1. Pictures 1,2 and 3...An old ZERO RAKE BRASS prop...As stated above somewhere, cup increases the rake...
Flat part of the blade...zero degrees RAKE. Cupped are 10degree RAKE.....................

now the part where it says cup increases rake is 100%wrong.
the rake of the propeller is the trailing edge angle compared to root hub.
its fixed unless you start gringing all the way along the trailing edge.
when you cup a prop if anything you would be decreasing the rake not extending it.

cup make smore pitch not more rake..........
ive got 2 props for a little suzuki,both same pitch but one has a lot more rake, the one with more
rake has so much that ive had to cut the trim tab for it to fit the engine.
.
It seems that over on scream and fkly there has also been debates on the subject of rake who says what it is.
pics to



Here is what it realy is in very simple terms and even a picture of 3 props eplaining it..e
even bill might understand this.
.
http://boatpropellers.iboats.com/propeller-tutorials/rake/



i think too many people have got their wording mixed up with the actual meaning of rake.
Rake is not blade angle all across the blade area, its only the trailing edge that is truely called rake.

but like ive said before maybe in the usa you have totally different meaning of rake than the rest of the world.


phill

rumleyfips
01-19-2013, 07:03 AM
Good one Bill. I can't understand what is motivating the hostility either.

Ron: The heat treating and blacksmithing info was great.

John

phillnjack
01-19-2013, 07:33 AM
yes very informative, just such a shame nobody here is understanding what effects welding has to metal structure.
we all know if anything gets too hot it melts and we all know (i would imagine ) that heat softens metal, or there would be no point at all in using the heat.

Fast Fred
01-19-2013, 07:43 AM
heat tempered, the art of makin metal stronger uesin heat.

Ron Hill
01-19-2013, 10:02 AM
yes very informative, just such a shame nobody here is understanding what effects welding has to metal structure.
we all know if anything gets too hot it melts and we all know (i would imagine ) that heat softens metal, or there would be no point at all in using the heat.

Who said anything about welding?

Trhere is a MAJOR difference between "HEATING METAL" and "Melting Metal". Look at it like this, you take butter out of the frig, it warms some, and you can put butter on your toast. If you melt butter to put on popcorn, when it cools in the bottom of the popcorn bowl, it isn't butter anymore. You heat stainless to a zillion degrees to melt it.....If I get to the shop today, I'll take a picture of our melt prob..a digital temperature gauge. I'll show you me ovens, the melter and the press needed.

Do a Google search and read about heat treating stainless. (17-4 and 15-5).

rumleyfips
01-19-2013, 12:06 PM
35 years ago, Tommy Marcel showed up at Chrstal Lake NY with a Czaplewski ASH wheel coloured blue and purple. Tommy said the prop was streched ( hammered blacksmith style) annealed in a heat treating oven. It cost more, but at the time, running 18+" hights a lot of props broke. Tommy liked having a wheel with the stresses removed and that was a bit less brittle.

Using heat and hammers as prop working tools doesn't seem to be anything new.

John McManus

Ron Hill
01-19-2013, 12:39 PM
35 years ago, Tommy Marcel showed up at Chrstal Lake NY with a Czaplewski ASH wheel coloured blue and purple. Tommy said the prop was streched ( hammered blacksmith style) annealed in a heat treating oven. It cost more, but at the time, running 18+" hights a lot of props broke. Tommy liked having a wheel with the stresses removed and that was a bit less brittle.

Using heat and hammers as prop working tools doesn't seem to be anything new.

John McManus

Julie Seaman was quite a driver. She was a second generation driver. She won the A Hydro Nationals is Wakefield when there was probably 60 entries in her class. Julie retire from racing and was an attorney in California. She never married, but adopted several children. The last time I saw her she came to Bakersfield to sell her old propellers. Chad was racing the NEW 15A in J Runabout and KG-4 props were working well. I bought two of Julie's 15 props. One was her Czaplewski two blade Record I saw her win the Nationals with.

The never ran good on our J Runabout, but that prop on a J Hydro, and you could not lose. I loaned it to kids that had never trophied, and they won.....Then, I ruined it, trying to get it to run on the runabout. John Czaplewski was a master of masters. I'd bet he had a hundred hours in every prop he ever made!

Ron Hill
01-19-2013, 12:53 PM
All these pictures are from Hill Marine's Propeller factory: We make Signature Propellers Anyway, Chad tells me stainless is heated to 2950 degrees before we pour it.

1. Digital temperature probe
2. $75,000 thing melts stainless in a very short time
3. New melt bars are melted
4. This is what props look like after being cast and the shell removed
5. Re-Melt stainless, used for hunting props as remelts are harder than new metal. Hunting props need to be hard as hell to cut through mud, rocks and logs...
6. Sanded props ready for the "Drag Finish" machines. (Hill Marine casts about 100 Signature propellers a week).
7. Heat treat oven....You can't melt stainless here but you can get it hot enough to bent it..

8. Serious press, with the right blocks you can repitch just about anything....I think we could crush Goldfinger's Lincoln Continental.

A prop dosn't have to be melted to be bent...

rumleyfips
01-19-2013, 02:27 PM
Czaplewski made a good wheel. A guy walked up to me one day and handed me a prop he found on the beach. Czaplewski , but he couldn't find the owner: run it he said. The next day I ran second to Tommy Marcel in the first heat of ASH and second to Ron France in the second heat: good prop, who ever beat Tommy and Ron on the same day.
?
When I got home , I tested , went up and gained a 1/2 mph . The next run a blade broke off. I never went that fast agian.

I was parked beside him , maybe at Wakefield in the 70's but couldn't get an ASR wheel. He would do an ASH wheel so I sent him a box of broken props to make a 3 blade. Then he died. ; a loss he was good.



John McManus