How To Pack A Propeller Shaft at Lewis Sardina blog

How To Pack A Propeller Shaft. Many sail boats have a 1 1/4″, 1 1/8″, 1″ or 7/8″ inch prop shaft and a piece of scrap dodger tube, in your shaft size, works great as a cutting jig. Curl one of your cut lengths into a ring around the shaft and push it into the stuffing box. The easy way to do this is to wrap the packing around the shaft in some accessible location and cut across the overlap with a razor knife. If your boat has inboard power, chances are it has a stuffing box that allows a propeller shaft to penetrate the hull below the waterline without letting water in and flooding the boat. Repacking a packing gland/stuffing box with a rope seal on an inboard boat. Subscribe for more tutorial videos!

How Propeller Works & Functions Of Propeller
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The easy way to do this is to wrap the packing around the shaft in some accessible location and cut across the overlap with a razor knife. Curl one of your cut lengths into a ring around the shaft and push it into the stuffing box. Subscribe for more tutorial videos! Repacking a packing gland/stuffing box with a rope seal on an inboard boat. Many sail boats have a 1 1/4″, 1 1/8″, 1″ or 7/8″ inch prop shaft and a piece of scrap dodger tube, in your shaft size, works great as a cutting jig. If your boat has inboard power, chances are it has a stuffing box that allows a propeller shaft to penetrate the hull below the waterline without letting water in and flooding the boat.

How Propeller Works & Functions Of Propeller

How To Pack A Propeller Shaft Many sail boats have a 1 1/4″, 1 1/8″, 1″ or 7/8″ inch prop shaft and a piece of scrap dodger tube, in your shaft size, works great as a cutting jig. Subscribe for more tutorial videos! Curl one of your cut lengths into a ring around the shaft and push it into the stuffing box. Repacking a packing gland/stuffing box with a rope seal on an inboard boat. If your boat has inboard power, chances are it has a stuffing box that allows a propeller shaft to penetrate the hull below the waterline without letting water in and flooding the boat. Many sail boats have a 1 1/4″, 1 1/8″, 1″ or 7/8″ inch prop shaft and a piece of scrap dodger tube, in your shaft size, works great as a cutting jig. The easy way to do this is to wrap the packing around the shaft in some accessible location and cut across the overlap with a razor knife.

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