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Cupping a prop
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<blockquote data-quote="RaisedByWolves" data-source="post: 480395" data-attributes="member: 22989"><p>I’ve been following this as I plan on trying it on one of my props when I get my jack plate built.</p><p></p><p>What I plan on doing is using one blade as a master and cup it until it looks correct, then making an imprint of it either with bondo or similar, then using that as a guide for cupping the other two blades.</p><p></p><p>After that’s done it will get sharpened and then balanced.</p><p></p><p>The sharpening is more to help it cut through weeds rather than any performance advantage.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RaisedByWolves, post: 480395, member: 22989"] I’ve been following this as I plan on trying it on one of my props when I get my jack plate built. What I plan on doing is using one blade as a master and cup it until it looks correct, then making an imprint of it either with bondo or similar, then using that as a guide for cupping the other two blades. After that’s done it will get sharpened and then balanced. The sharpening is more to help it cut through weeds rather than any performance advantage. [/QUOTE]
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