Wayne,
B
One way to do this would be to replace one or two bolts in the gear output
coupling flange with longer ones. The threaded portion sticking out beyond the
nut would be available to take the end link of a short chain secured to the
stringer alongside.
B
Shut down the engine. pop the chain onto the bolt, thread on and tighten a
nut, and it will keep the shaft stationary. Probably double-nut it, as well.
5/16" chain would be plenty strong enough.
B
Then you could do it anytime it was necessary.
B
Crude, but I think it would work.
--- On Sat, 2/6/10, Wayne Prichard wayne@cruisermarine.com wrote:
From: Wayne Prichard wayne@cruisermarine.com
Subject: RE: T&T: Free Wheeling a Twin Disc
To: "'Phil Little'" plittle2005@yahoo.com
Date: Saturday, February 6, 2010, 3:43 AM
Hi Phil,
B
Thanks for the answer.B I need some way to do it quickly and then free it up
again. Ibve often wondered what action would be necessary if I had to be
towed in a substantial distance.B Also, Ibm one of those guys with the big
dual engines and I considered free wheeling while we did the Loop in 2008 but
did not know how to stop the spin on one side and then repeat the process on
the other side.
B
Wayne
B
Wayne Prichard
CruiserMarine.com
1422 Coachman Lane
Knoxville, TN B 37919
B
(865) 680-2080
wayne@cruisermarine.com
www.cruisermarine.comB
Boat Supplies for the Frugal Cruiser!
B
B
From: Phil Little [mailto:plittle2005@yahoo.com]
Sent: Friday, February 05, 2010 9:41 PM
To: trawlers-and-trawlering@lists.samurai.com ; Wayne Prichard
Subject: Re: T&T: Free Wheeling a Twin Disc
B
Aye, there's the rub (To quote Cap'n Shakespeare)!!
B
The method the offshore service boat guys used was to remove a coupling bolt
at the gear output flange, and attach a chain. Killer to do with a sea
running, holding station, and the wave action spinning the shaft!
B
(If you replaced one bolt with a longer one, to which the chain link and a nut
could be added to the additional length projection when needed, B this would
make the job quicker and safer)
B
PITAB to do but necessary if they had to run hard to make a schedule and the
shaft would be spinning up to 500 rpm.
B
This is why we (TD) developed the external plug-n lube/cooling pump.
B
This whole tying off is probably moot if the vessel speed is slow, but who
knows the upper limits for sure? I just saw aB number of boats in the Gulf
with fried gears. (There was even a sign in the pilothouse of one crewboat
warning personnel never to allow the gears to backdrive with an engine down
because the gear was likely to fail!)
B
Phil Little
--- On Fri, 2/5/10, Wayne Prichard < wayne@cruisermarine.com > wrote:
From: Wayne Prichard < wayne@cruisermarine.com >
Subject: T&T: Free Wheeling a Twin Disc
To: trawlers-and-trawlering@lists.samurai.com
Date: Friday, February 5, 2010, 6:47 AM
Snip: I personally would not back drive a TD gear without tying off the
shaft.
Phil,
What method would you recommend for tying off the shaft?
Thanks,
Wayne
1984 Californian 43
MV Segue
http://lists.samurai.com/mailman/listinfo/trawlers-and-trawlering
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Trawlers & Trawlering and T&T are trademarks of Water World
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B
Snip: replace one or two bolts in the gear output coupling flange with
longer ones.
Phil,
Actually I don't think it is crude at all and I think it would be quick to
change over. Crude is in the eye of the beholder. You should see some of
the other things I have done.
Wayne
MV Segue
1984 Californian 43
Wayne Prichard
CruiserMarine.com
1422 Coachman Lane
Knoxville, TN 37919
(865) 680-2080
www.cruisermarine.com http://www.cruisermarine.com/
Boat Supplies for the Frugal Cruiser!
From: Phil Little [mailto:plittle2005@yahoo.com]
Sent: Sunday, February 07, 2010 12:11 AM
To: Wayne Prichard
Cc: 'Trawlers-and-Trawlering'
Subject: RE: T&T: Free Wheeling a Twin Disc
Wayne,
One way to do this would be to replace one or two bolts in the gear output
coupling flange with longer ones. The threaded portion sticking out beyond
the nut would be available to take the end link of a short chain secured to
the stringer alongside.
Shut down the engine. pop the chain onto the bolt, thread on and tighten a
nut, and it will keep the shaft stationary. Probably double-nut it, as well.
5/16" chain would be plenty strong enough.
Then you could do it anytime it was necessary.
Crude, but I think it would work.
--- On Sat, 2/6/10, Wayne Prichard wayne@cruisermarine.com wrote:
From: Wayne Prichard wayne@cruisermarine.com
Subject: RE: T&T: Free Wheeling a Twin Disc
To: "'Phil Little'" plittle2005@yahoo.com
Date: Saturday, February 6, 2010, 3:43 AM
Hi Phil,
Thanks for the answer. I need some way to do it quickly and then free it up
again. I've often wondered what action would be necessary if I had to be
towed in a substantial distance. Also, I'm one of those guys with the big
dual engines and I considered free wheeling while we did the Loop in 2008
but did not know how to stop the spin on one side and then repeat the
process on the other side.
Wayne
Wayne Prichard
CruiserMarine.com
1422 Coachman Lane
Knoxville, TN 37919
(865) 680-2080
http://us.mc830.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=wayne@cruisermarine.com
wayne@cruisermarine.com
http://www.cruisermarine.com/ www.cruisermarine.com
Boat Supplies for the Frugal Cruiser!
From: Phil Little [mailto:plittle2005@yahoo.com]
Sent: Friday, February 05, 2010 9:41 PM
To: trawlers-and-trawlering@lists.samurai.com ; Wayne Prichard
Subject: Re: T&T: Free Wheeling a Twin Disc
Aye, there's the rub (To quote Cap'n Shakespeare)!!
The method the offshore service boat guys used was to remove a coupling bolt
at the gear output flange, and attach a chain. Killer to do with a sea
running, holding station, and the wave action spinning the shaft!
(If you replaced one bolt with a longer one, to which the chain link and a
nut could be added to the additional length projection when needed, this
would make the job quicker and safer)
PITA to do but necessary if they had to run hard to make a schedule and the
shaft would be spinning up to 500 rpm.
This is why we (TD) developed the external plug-n lube/cooling pump.
This whole tying off is probably moot if the vessel speed is slow, but who
knows the upper limits for sure? I just saw a number of boats in the Gulf
with fried gears. (There was even a sign in the pilothouse of one crewboat
warning personnel never to allow the gears to backdrive with an engine down
because the gear was likely to fail!)
Phil Little
--- On Fri, 2/5/10, Wayne Prichard < wayne@cruisermarine.com > wrote:
From: Wayne Prichard < wayne@cruisermarine.com >
Subject: T&T: Free Wheeling a Twin Disc
To: trawlers-and-trawlering@lists.samurai.com
Date: Friday, February 5, 2010, 6:47 AM
Snip: I personally would not back drive a TD gear without tying off the
shaft.
Phil,
What method would you recommend for tying off the shaft?
Thanks,
Wayne
1984 Californian 43
MV Segue
http://lists.samurai.com/mailman/listinfo/trawlers-and-trawlering
http://lists.samurai.com/mailman/listinfo/trawlers-and-trawlering
To unsubscribe or modify your subscription options (get password, change
email address, etc) go to:
http://lists.samurai.com/mailman/options/trawlers-and-trawlering
http://lists.samurai.com/mailman/options/trawlers-and-trawlering
Trawlers & Trawlering and T&T are trademarks of Water World
Productions. Unauthorized use is prohibited.