Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Propeller care
Practical Boat Owner
|May 2025
Stu Davies has valuable tips on how to maintain your prop-and explains how this vital bit of kit works
-

The next time your boat is on the hard for a scrub, antifoul or whatever, have a look around and you will see quite a lot of different propellers on your neighbours’ boats.
Made of aluminium, brass or bronze – even plastic in the case of small outboards – some have two blades, some have three and some, very occasionally, have four.
While most propellers have fixed blades some have blades that fold.
Propellers can be right-handed, where they turn clockwise as you go ahead, or left-handed where they turn anti-clockwise to go ahead. Look from the stern to determine your rotation; mine is left-handed.

How it works
How a propeller works is quite complex. It transforms 'torque' from the engine into a linear motion. A boat's propeller is often referred to as a 'screw' but it is far from it.
It 'screws' its way through the water because the blades work similar to a wing on an aircraft and like a torque converter in a car's automatic transmission; once it is up to speed it almost actually has a positive 'grip' on the water.
A turning propeller moves water behind the blades, almost like a hand grabbing water and pushing it behind it. This produces part of the thrust.
Each blade has a distinctive curved shape which, as it turns, acts like a foil in the process 'pulling' the propeller and the boat forward.
It acts like a foil because the angle of the blade creates lift as it moves through the water, in a similar way that a wing creates lift through the air, with a positive pressure, on the underside and a negative pressure, on the top side.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der May 2025-Ausgabe von Practical Boat Owner.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Practical Boat Owner

Practical Boat Owner
Keep your boat dry this winter
Ashore or afloat, winter cold and damp can have a detrimental effect. Jake Kavanagh looks at options for keeping condensation and moisture at bay
9 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
First time above the Arctic Circle
JoJo Pickering is wowed by mountains, deep anchorages, fjords and endless daylight while sailing a 48ft yacht on Norway's west coast
7 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Legendary boats
Saša Fegić shares his pick of the boats that shaped sailing history and transformed the sport
13 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Diesel engine fluids
The key to a smooth-running diesel engine is making sure you look the fluids, as John Panye explains
10 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Dismasted off the Lizard
Richard Ayres makes his first Mayday call when his yacht is dismasted and prop fouled close to the Manacle rocks
6 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Safer boarding quidance for small craft
Skippers and crew of small boats are being advised to consider boarding aids such as additional ladders, handholds, and alternative means of access, such as a tender.
1 min
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
The new old navigation
You can do it with your eyes shut
3 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Ex-lifeboatman's nine year solo voyage
A former Plymouth lifeboat volunteer has returned from his 30,000-mile circumnavigation on his 36ft yacht, nine years after setting off.
1 min
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Island of dreams
Modern intrusions vie with the trill of oystercatchers close to Dave's dream home
3 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Ella's Arctic record attempt on pause
Ella Hibbert, who is the first British woman to sail the Northwest Passage single-handed, has halted her solo sail around the Arctic due to safety concerns ahead of attempting the Northeast Passage behind schedule, but vowed to continue again next summer.
1 min
November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size