inthedirtagain
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2011
- Messages
- 321
I posted last year on wanting to replace props on my grandfathers old boat, and have done so recently with the help of my local shop, but didn't get the results I was looking for. This is on a 1969 Silverline DeVille with the original Merc 1000 ToP. This 16ft boat/motor combo comes in around 1300 lbs, and with an old 3-blade 17p prop, I can reliably hit 5200rpm @ 37mph with me and my 13yo son. When loaded to its rated capacity of 6 people, plus a cooler and our skis and boards, my rpm drops to about 4900-ish. I'm not concerned about speed, but would like to maintain the upper rpm limit of 5300 when at capacity.
My local shop sold me a 13.25 x 16p Black Max and with just me and my boy, we're only able to hit 4400 rpm. I've verified the timing and max throttle advancement, as well as the compression (all within spec, 130psi x6), and I've tried different trim positions. The older 17p prop is smaller than the new prop, so I'm wondering if that is where the difference in rpm is coming from. Its a beat up 12.5x17p that I've cleaned up as best I can in my garage. The shop thinks the newer prop is more efficient at grabbing the water, and I would agree as I can go into a much harder turn without any prop blowout.
Since we ski and board with this boat, pulling power and keeping on a low-speed plane are more important to me than top speed. I'm interested in a 4-blade prop, but want to maintain a 12.5in diameter. The shop won't take their prop back, and I don't want to waste anymore $$$. Any help here would be appreciated.
My local shop sold me a 13.25 x 16p Black Max and with just me and my boy, we're only able to hit 4400 rpm. I've verified the timing and max throttle advancement, as well as the compression (all within spec, 130psi x6), and I've tried different trim positions. The older 17p prop is smaller than the new prop, so I'm wondering if that is where the difference in rpm is coming from. Its a beat up 12.5x17p that I've cleaned up as best I can in my garage. The shop thinks the newer prop is more efficient at grabbing the water, and I would agree as I can go into a much harder turn without any prop blowout.
Since we ski and board with this boat, pulling power and keeping on a low-speed plane are more important to me than top speed. I'm interested in a 4-blade prop, but want to maintain a 12.5in diameter. The shop won't take their prop back, and I don't want to waste anymore $$$. Any help here would be appreciated.