Francis, ductility is a big factor in Prop Shafts. The material is mild steel, 1018. You get the strength needed by the size of the shaft. A typical 9 inch shaft can swing a 90 inch diameter propeller at about 1300 horsepower. The speed is usually around 250 RPM.
All criticle surfaces, the Prop Taper, the Bearing Journals, and the Seal Surface are all Stainless Steel weld.
In lay terms, we Machine the shaft down 1/4 inch to the side in the shape of the finished shaft, then weld it up with 308/316L Stainless using submerged arc welding. We then finish Machine the Stainless Surfaces to the finished dimensions. All other exposed surfaces are coated with epoxy resin fiberglass.
There are solid Stainless Steel shafts, it is made from 17-4 at H11-50 heat treat. The drawback is cost, and it's corrosion resistance is rather low.
Here is a 8 1/2 inch diameter shaft we just rebuilt and are fitting the prop too.
http://benchrest.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=21740&stc=1&d=1542227791
Holeee Hoppin' Catfishes..... I _think_ what you're saying is..... you machine down to under-size, then build back up with SS material WELDED TO THE BASE METAL which is 1018, then re-machine to size, and fit?
Thank You Jackie for giving me a glimpse into a fascinating world.
Fascinating. Especially to a guy who can't thread a needle, tie his own shoes or hammer a nail straight in...Very intersting stuff
You are correct. Even with two carriages, the Machinist can often have several hours of doing nothing but watching shavings hit the floor.Jackie,
What does one do to pass the time while turning down something that long? We're talking hours per pass, correct? And does that machine have two carriages?
I'd love to hear a description of how you set that up and run it.
Too cool!
Justin
Jackie what do you personally attribute this current up swing in business too and why is it now booming. It has to be real assuring to your employees to have two to three years of work per-say sitting in the bank. It also begs one to ask will you have to be hiring more and possibly having to expand or can it simply remain as it is. And also congratulations towards your business, all your staff and to all the families involved who will benefit from this increased work.
JLouis
Louis, I can thank the Federal Government for the upswing in business, especially new construction.
Here is the deal. Up untill about 8 years ago, Inland Push Boats and River Boats came under very few if any regulations....
...
Now, boats have to meet standards. This means...stricter regulations on vessels being constructed.
But, I thought Trump said gov't regulations were bad for business.
But, I thought Trump said gov't regulations were bad for business.