jetpackmainiac
09-25-2008, 08:12 PM
Any salty words of wisdom would be most welcome.
With a pulley driven drive shaft, such as Rob Whites rig on his Atkins based Rescue Minor, how is the forward thrust of the prop and therefore the drive shaft translated to the hull?
I spoke with some very nice folks at Grainger Supply today and they suggested running the drive shaft through a tapered pillow block. This is what Mr. White did in the RM (although he does not use the word tapered, only pillow or flange block). But the blocks they showed me mounted to the drive shaft with 1/8 in or smaller setscrews. I am sure two set screws are adequate to handle the rotational forces, but those rotational forces are sent to the prop which pushes the boat by translating that rotational energy into a linear force that pushes the drive shaft and therefore the boat forward or backwards. So two or four setscrews (depending on the number of pillow blocks) bare the entire effort of the motor, prop and running gear?
What stops the drive shaft from being pulled or pushed out of position by the prop? Just the set screws??? How is the shaft connected to the hull with out being connected to a trans/motor assembly? What is it that bares the load of the push from the prop into the boats structure? What is it that holds the shaft from moving fore and aft?
I am laying out plans to build an Atkins Patsy using a motor I already have that would require a pulley connection to the drive shaft.
Thanks, any help is great. :)
Jet
With a pulley driven drive shaft, such as Rob Whites rig on his Atkins based Rescue Minor, how is the forward thrust of the prop and therefore the drive shaft translated to the hull?
I spoke with some very nice folks at Grainger Supply today and they suggested running the drive shaft through a tapered pillow block. This is what Mr. White did in the RM (although he does not use the word tapered, only pillow or flange block). But the blocks they showed me mounted to the drive shaft with 1/8 in or smaller setscrews. I am sure two set screws are adequate to handle the rotational forces, but those rotational forces are sent to the prop which pushes the boat by translating that rotational energy into a linear force that pushes the drive shaft and therefore the boat forward or backwards. So two or four setscrews (depending on the number of pillow blocks) bare the entire effort of the motor, prop and running gear?
What stops the drive shaft from being pulled or pushed out of position by the prop? Just the set screws??? How is the shaft connected to the hull with out being connected to a trans/motor assembly? What is it that bares the load of the push from the prop into the boats structure? What is it that holds the shaft from moving fore and aft?
I am laying out plans to build an Atkins Patsy using a motor I already have that would require a pulley connection to the drive shaft.
Thanks, any help is great. :)
Jet