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CrunchyFrog -> RE: stuffing tubes (4/6/2008 2:27:27 AM)
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A really common way of doing it, simpler than building a stuffing box, is to have your prop shaft a solid metal rod--and then jacket it with a short section of hollow rod, the next size up, around the point where the prop shaft exits the watertight cylinder. I use 1/8" solid rod for the prop shaft (standard size for r/c boats), and a half-inch of 5/32" hollow rod to seal it. That said, I should say I'm drydocked for the last couple of weeks because my propshaft seal that had held up great for quite a few sessions suddenly decided to leak like a faucet. Then there's such a thing as a stuffing box--a simple enough thing you find them on Wal-Mart subs, though my homebuild can't have one--it's basically a pot of thick grease, Vaseline or the like, that your prop shaft runs through. The hole in each end is fitted with tight tolerance to your prop shaft; the water presses on the water-exposed side of the grease, deforming it; it will push fine droplets of grease into your watertight cylinder as your shaft spins--but Vaseline, unlike liquid, won't flood your boat. D & E Miniatures in Virginia or Mike's Sub Works (Texas?) might sell a stuffing tube/box.Subworks seals
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