Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
You use a soft foam snug in the back, on the sides and in the front. You tack weld 1/4 inch thick rails about 1/2 inch from the gear feet to form a dam, about 1/2 inch higher Than the pour. You seal the edges with silicone, then pour the ChockFast in with a rise. It takes 24 hours to set completely.How do you contain such a liquid in application?
-
Have Superbolts/Supernuts gained acceptance in marine applications? They make it easy to control preload (light or high) and are a lot safer than using slugging wrenches in tight spaces!When setting gears in ChocFast, it is customary to body fit all of the hold down bolts, as the torque on the bolts is quite light. As an example, if you set this particular gear in ChockFast, the torque on those 1 1/2 inch bolts would only be about 200 pound feet, as any tighter will start to compress the chock. On shims, you use A slugging wrench.
Have Superbolts/Supernuts gained acceptance in marine applications? They make it easy to control preload (light or high) and are a lot safer than using slugging wrenches in tight spaces!
Must have been a former government worker.When I was young and starting out working as a draftsman, I worked in an engineering department that designed and the shop built aluminum rolling mills. We took our coffee breaks in the shop where we would see the equipment being built.
One day walking to our break area I saw a man measuring the OD of a large roll, probably 30-36" in diameter. The micrometer was huge and he was careful, getting the right feel for his measurement. Then he put the mic down and measured the opening on the mic with his tape measure. I think I almost laughed out loud.
Richard
Our shop is on the East Side of Houston. Actually in Jacinto City.Hey Jackie, your picture's remind me of my Farrell days and the last boring mill was sent to canada and the table weight was 96 tons and the bed was 128 tons.It had a 150 hp electric motor and the table rode on hydrastatic pockets which I spent 45 days in Montreal setting the machine up. The cross rail was right around 100 tons. . In another words big stuff. The last lathe I worked on was a driveshaft lathe for the Navy . It was over 80 feet in length and roughly 10 feet across. The chips it removed weighed a lot. I really like working with big stuff so I admire your craftsmanship. Where do you work out of or do you travel to each rebuild.
As a commercial fisherman for 33 years and a current commercial boat broker, I can tell you those props didn't come in a cracker Jack boxWe have a couple of 11 inch diameter prop shafts out of a Harbor Tug in for rebuild.
One of the operations is fitting the prop‘s taper to the shaft. The props are 112 inches in diameter X 102 inches pitch. Each prop is rated at 2500 HP.View attachment 1273938View attachment 1273940View attachment 1273941Here are a couple of pictures.View attachment 1273942
Those are called Kort Nozzles. They are stationary.Jackie,
Do the red rings act to steer the thrust from the props?
Curious
Thank you for the explanation. Makes sense.Those are called Kort Nozzles. They are stationary.
They increase the efficiency of the prop, just as an induction ring around a fan increases it’s efficiency.
They downside is they act like huge vacuum cleaners, increasing the possibility of objects getting sucked up.