Hello. Bought a boat last summer, a small (25 foot) but comparatively heavy-ish walkaround with a pilothouse, berth and some amenities. It's equipped with a Mercury 150 four stroke. The original prop was a 14.5 dia with a 15 pitch. The boat had problems: not enough grip, sliding in turns, very poor low speed handling, poor fuel consumption, mediocre acceleration. It did, however, hit the 150's rpm range of 5000-5800 at WOT.
On advice, I re-propped the engine and new prop is a 15.75 dia with a 15 pitch. This prop is also cupped; the original one was not. All problems listed above went away: the boat handles very well at all speeds, much grip in turns and no sliding, very good acceleration to plane, good fuel consumption rate. I'd call it a success, except for one factor:
WOT is now at 4880 rpm, or 120 rpm below the range recommended by Mercury. Here are the qualifiers:
-- I understand that larger diameter props at same pitch will lose top rpm.
-- I don't run at WOT. I don't accelerate at WOT. Ever.
-- Out of deference to my wife, this boat, one of two we own, is a winter and "un-sunny" day cruiser. It lives at 25 knots and 3850 rpm, where engine, boat and wife are happiest in terms of comfort and fuel consumption, mostly inshore.
-- Occasionally I'll run it for five or ten minutes at 4500 rpm to sweep out a little carbon.
-- Back in the last century I put myself through college working as a diesel mechanic. I know what a lugging engine is like and I know what smaller engines need to handle loads. This engine isn't lugging and handles the load well, much better, from what i can hear and feel, with the new prop.
So - is 120 rpm off the Mercury recommended range cause for any concern? I wouldn't think so, given the circumstances outlined above. But... due diligence: Am I missing something?
Thanks.
On advice, I re-propped the engine and new prop is a 15.75 dia with a 15 pitch. This prop is also cupped; the original one was not. All problems listed above went away: the boat handles very well at all speeds, much grip in turns and no sliding, very good acceleration to plane, good fuel consumption rate. I'd call it a success, except for one factor:
WOT is now at 4880 rpm, or 120 rpm below the range recommended by Mercury. Here are the qualifiers:
-- I understand that larger diameter props at same pitch will lose top rpm.
-- I don't run at WOT. I don't accelerate at WOT. Ever.
-- Out of deference to my wife, this boat, one of two we own, is a winter and "un-sunny" day cruiser. It lives at 25 knots and 3850 rpm, where engine, boat and wife are happiest in terms of comfort and fuel consumption, mostly inshore.
-- Occasionally I'll run it for five or ten minutes at 4500 rpm to sweep out a little carbon.
-- Back in the last century I put myself through college working as a diesel mechanic. I know what a lugging engine is like and I know what smaller engines need to handle loads. This engine isn't lugging and handles the load well, much better, from what i can hear and feel, with the new prop.
So - is 120 rpm off the Mercury recommended range cause for any concern? I wouldn't think so, given the circumstances outlined above. But... due diligence: Am I missing something?
Thanks.
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