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Difference between aluminum and stainless props
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<blockquote data-quote="thill" data-source="post: 499158" data-attributes="member: 4972"><p>Yes, perfectly Runs from 53-5500, depending on my pitch. </p><p></p><p>I went from a 15P aluminum that seemed great to a 17P stainless. I did it because I found it in my prop pile and was just curiuos. And because it looked cool. The difference was shocking in a good way. NORMALLY, you go down a pitch for a nice, stainless prop, but in this case, it was up. </p><p></p><p>Something a prop guy told me long ago was that hydrodynamics is more complicated than it looks, and sometimes it will surprise you. In my years of working on boats, this has proven very true from time to time.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="thill, post: 499158, member: 4972"] Yes, perfectly Runs from 53-5500, depending on my pitch. I went from a 15P aluminum that seemed great to a 17P stainless. I did it because I found it in my prop pile and was just curiuos. And because it looked cool. The difference was shocking in a good way. NORMALLY, you go down a pitch for a nice, stainless prop, but in this case, it was up. Something a prop guy told me long ago was that hydrodynamics is more complicated than it looks, and sometimes it will surprise you. In my years of working on boats, this has proven very true from time to time. [/QUOTE]
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