texasfishingforum.com logo
Main Menu
Advertisement
Affiliates
Advertisement
Newest Members
KoreanFishMonger69, MurphJax, saminator01, avences, RevCDale
119192 Registered Users
Top Posters(All Time)
TexDawg 119,865
Bigbob_FTW 95,473
John175☮ 85,927
Pilothawk 83,277
Bob Davis 82,637
Mark Perry 72,522
Derek 🐝 68,322
JDavis7873 67,416
Forum Statistics
Forums59
Topics1,039,181
Posts13,960,471
Members144,192
Most Online39,925
Dec 30th, 2023
Print Thread
Prop pitch #11545764 04/16/16 02:52 AM
Joined: Dec 2013
Posts: 309
C
Chaparro75 Offline OP
Angler
OP Offline
Angler
C
Joined: Dec 2013
Posts: 309
Need some help: trying to get better hole shot when pulling tube.
I have a 16' boat with a 90hp prop is 21" pitch. What pitch would I need to drop the top speed by 10mph?

Re: Prop pitch [Re: Chaparro75] #11546596 04/16/16 07:24 PM
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 2,957
B
Bob Landry Offline
Extreme Angler
Offline
Extreme Angler
B
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 2,957
How do you know that you do not have the correct prop for the operating range of your motor?


2015 Seaark 1872 MV CC Etec-90
Two Helix 12 CHIRP SI's, , MinnKota Riptide ST80/i-pilot Link, Bob's Hydraulic
2020 Robalo R200 CC, Yamaha 150

Bitter Gun Owner
Bitter Clinger
Armed Infidel
Re: Prop pitch [Re: Chaparro75] #11546646 04/16/16 08:05 PM
Joined: Feb 2015
Posts: 4,724
F
Flippin-Out Offline
TFF Team Angler
Offline
TFF Team Angler
F
Joined: Feb 2015
Posts: 4,724
You are asking the wrong question. As to dropping top speed 10 mph, why would that bring any improvement for tubing? I can put a prop on your boat with excessive pitch that will result in a 10 mph drop in top speed - along with the boat wallowing to barely get on plane. That gives you a 10 mph drop in top speed, but certainly won't help pull a tuber.

What you SHOULD say is "I want a prop with a very strong holeshot for tubing without concern for what top speed I get from the prop."

If you don't have a tachometer, you need one. You also need to know the recommended top RPM range for your outboard. This will be the RPM range that generates the most horsepower, but won't hurt your engine, provided in the owners manual. For a given use configuration of the boat, and the prop that's on the boat, you never want to exceed the recommended RPM when at max throttle. Over-rev is not good; at some point the rev-limiter will kick in, but ideally you never want to get to that.

The way to do this: "I have engine xxx with an RPM range of yyyy-zzzz for max recommended RPM from the manual. I currently have a 21" pitch prop turning XXXX rpm. I want to get a strong hole-shot for tubing. Should I try another pitch prop, and if so, what should I try?"

Fill in the xxxx yyyy and XXXX info above and then ask your question again. At that point, someone will be able to tell you if there is a prop change that could help you, or if you are just "a bit shy on engine".

Previous Thread
Index
Next Thread

© 1998-2022 OUTDOOR SITES NETWORK all rights reserved USA and Worldwide
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.3