I imagine the answer has a lot to do with the hp of the motor.
I have a Force 5hp (1990 Merc) that I like for it's light weight. I've only run it in a barrel so I don't know how it performs on the lake. It has the original plastic prop. Do these flatten out under load?
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I generally go against the line here, but here goes:
On my '95 Sylvan with a 112 SPL Johnson I ran a ComProp for years. It was a plastic composite 4 blad 17" pitch. I'd hit about 40 WOT and was able to tube all my buddies in college with no issues. I had a prop strike once and it took a chunk out so I bought another one for cheap. I had to be careful with the RPM's at WOT (so not really WOT I guess) but that was true at that pitch no matter what prop I ran. When my son and his buddies got bigger and more numerous, I couldn't find a ComProp so I went with a 15" Solas with
There are those out there who feel you have to go SS or nothing, like aluminum and plastic are tissue paper attached to a hub. This isn't the case. Yes, they both flex more, but that can actually help a bit in the hole shot, and if you have kids who drive and risk a prop strike you help save your outdrive/lower unit with a softer metal/plastic.
So my advice would be this, look online, then read reviews and see what might fit what you want.