T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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443.1 | Worth every penny | DPHILL::HTINK | | Wed Nov 26 1986 15:05 | 8 |
|
We installed a Lasdrop this spring. I believe they've stopped using
Delrin in favor of a different plastic. We had absolutely no leaks
even when first installed...
I second Alan's recommendation.
|
443.2 | Another Endorsement for Lasdrop | CSSE::GARDINER | | Wed Nov 26 1986 16:27 | 18 |
| I installed 2 LasDrop seals on my boat this Spring. One on the
prop shaft and one on the rudder post. I have a canted rudder that
continually leaked water into the cockpit when motoring, regardless
of how tight I cranked the stuffing box. Using the Lasdrop seal
has stopped ALL leaks, Period!
The concept is not new. They have been using similar devices to
seal shafts on motors in large machinery that pump liquids. The
application as a stuffing box is just another marketing of an old
product. But, boy is it a God-send from the old stuffing box.
P.S. - The reduced drag on the prop shaft is said to conserve fuel
and this is very important when you're offshore.
Happy Sailing!
|
443.3 | LasDrop for Powerboats, too? | ZZZZ::GAUDET | Ski Nautique | Mon Dec 01 1986 15:03 | 10 |
| I know all you folks are sailboat types, but I'd like to know if
one of these LasDrops (or some variation thereof) would be suitable
for my inboard ski boat (I can hear the boos and hisses from here).
Where might I find such a device? Thanks for any help.
Happy Boating... :-)
...Roger...
|
443.4 | and the manufacturer is ... | PULSAR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Mon Dec 01 1986 21:32 | 19 |
| re .3:
If you will write on the blackboard 100 times
*** I will NEVER, EVER leave a wake when passing a sailboat ***
then read on.
The Lasdrop is manufactured by the Lemania Company, PO Box 22491, 1777
South East 15th Street, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33335, 305-523-1824. Local
distributor is H&H Propeller Shop, One Essex Street Extension, Salem, MA
01970, 617-744-3806. Special models are needed for speeds in excess of
30 to 40 knots. Contact Lemania for information.
Alan
|
443.5 | What a guy! | ZZZZ::GAUDET | Ski Nautique | Wed Dec 03 1986 11:48 | 25 |
| RE .4:
OK, I'll be a good boy! But I figure that if I come whizzing by
at about 40 there should be almost no wake anyway, right? The problem
is that I can't guarantee that the slalom skier I'm towing won't
decide to get cute and hang a tidal wave over your boat with a major
cut across the wake!!! Mind you, I don't condone this action,
at least with sailboats. But canoes are a different story! :-)
Thanks for the info, Alan. I'll definitely give Lemania a call.
Could be "Adios" to a long-standing problem.
...Roger...
P.S. I knew you sailboats people weren't all fluttering in the
breeze! I know, bad joke! :-) :-)
.
.
.
98 I will NEVER, EVER leave a wake when passing a sailboat
99 I will NEVER, EVER leave a wake when passing a sailboat
100 I will NEVER, EVER leave a wake when passing a sailboat
Whew! Done. OK?
|
443.6 | | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Wed Dec 03 1986 12:37 | 4 |
| 1 down 10e9 to go.
nice work
|
443.7 | a few years later... | HAEXLI::PMAIER | | Wed Jan 05 1994 10:08 | 9 |
| with half of my engine removed, I have a nice look at the stuffing box,
leaking, leaking.....
Alan, your LasDrop, still working fine ?
Can you remember how much wear on the shaft was allowed, when you
installed it ?
Thanks, Peter
|
443.8 | hi-tech all the way | OTOOA::MOWBRAY | This isn't a job its an Adventure | Wed Jan 05 1994 10:32 | 3 |
| I had a "PSS Shaft SEAL" on my previous boat and cannot understand how
the old-style is still surviving. The PSS/Lasdrop are much much
better.
|
443.9 | Deep Sea Seals | ESPO01::NEALE | Who can, do - who can't, consult | Wed Jan 05 1994 10:46 | 22 |
| I have a Deep Sea Seal fitted on my new boat - which hasn't been launched yet,
so I can't vouch for its effectiveness from first-hand experience :-). However,
these things have been generally used for some time in the UK, and probably
elsewhere (maybe under a different name?). There is generally an advertisement
for them in the UK sailing magazines.
They are much as Alan has described for the Lasdrop, except that the moving half
of the seal is also in rubber bellows clamped to the shaft, so that shaft wear
is not a problem, unless it also includes deep longitudinal ruts in the shaft!
The spring in the rubber bellows provides the force holding the moving half of
the seal against the fixed half. Ideally, it is supposed to be water lubricated,
and as I understand it most builders assume that water flowing in through the
cutless bearing at the outboard end of the shaft will provide this. However, my
boatbuilder was apparently a belt-and-braces man, and has coupled up the water
inlet on the seal (normally left blanked off) to a T-piece on the engine coolant
feed so that water is fed into the seal under some slight pressure.
Apparently, when fitted from new, the price is very similar to that of a
conventional packed gland with screw-down greaser, with the advantage of not
needing any attention in use.
- Brian
|
443.10 | good device | MASTR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed Jan 05 1994 12:27 | 24 |
| re .7:
Peter,
Yes, our Lasdrop (one of the original design ones) is still working just
fine after about 800 hours of use. The only attention I've given it has
been to replace the rubber bellows once. There seems to be virtually no
leakage. At least I haven't noticed any.
The sealing is between a delrin (or similar plastic) ring clamped into
the bellows and a stainless steel ring clamped to the propeller shaft.
There is an O-ring sealing the stainless steel ring on the shaft. As
long as the wear on the shaft isn't enough to cause the O-ring to leak
(this would be a lot of wear), there is no problem with previous shaft
wear.
Based on our experience, I'd recommend a Lasdrop, PSS, or the similar
seal from yet another competitor. I've really not minded not repacking a
traditional stuffing box every year or so. I don't see the need for the
water injection used in the latest designs, at least on my slow speed
(~1000 rpm) shaft. It is just one more water hose that could (will
someday) fail.
Alan
|
443.11 | | HAEXLI::PMAIER | | Thu Jan 06 1994 03:55 | 5 |
| thanks for the answers.
I will give it a try.
Peter
|
443.12 | no high tech for me | SCHOOL::HOWARTH | | Thu Jan 06 1994 13:30 | 10 |
|
I don't have a Lasdrop stuffing box but all of my stuffing box
problems disappeared when I changed the bronze propeller shaft to
stainless steel. In the past, I always had problems with the
stuffing box leaking especially at the beginning of the season. I
attributed it to verdigris building up on the shaft that caused
the packing material to leak. With the new SS shaft, I never have
to adjust the box.
Joe
|
443.13 | different experience | MASTR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Thu Jan 06 1994 14:43 | 5 |
| re .12:
Well, our traditional stuffing box always leaked more than our Lasdrop,
even with a stainless steel shaft.
|
443.14 | No Stuffing Box Leaks | SNOC01::RADKEHOWARD | | Thu Jan 06 1994 23:30 | 19 |
| For What It's Worth
I have not had to adjust our convential stuffing box on Viking Rose for
the three seasons that we have had her in the water (stainless shaft
with bronze prop). When under power the shaft produces one drip every
nine seconds, which is exactly the rate that it should be. There is no
leakage when the prop is not turning.
Friends of ours in Seattle had serious problems with their shaft seal
system (I don't recall which one). It seems that either system works
well under some circumstances and has problems under others. Any ideas
why this is the case?
By the way, although it is very easy to adjust the stuffing box on a
Westsail 42, I have not touched it since we purchased the boat.
Cheers,
Howard
|
443.15 | A couple of more drips with Lasdrops | MARX::CARTER | | Fri Jan 07 1994 09:50 | 17 |
| I have a Lasrop on my C+C29-2 with a Yanmar 2GM diesel. The length of
the shaft between the engine and the exit tube (shaft log?) on the boat
is short. Maybe a foot and a half. The Yanmar is a real shaker,
especially at lower rpm. I installed a Lasdrop about five years ago,
in order to avoid stuffing problems problems and to avoid periodic
adjusting of the stuffing box, since access to it stinks. I have never
gotten the Lasdrop to give me anything close to a dry seal. As the
engine shakes and rattles and rolls in its soft motor mounts, the
Lasdrop gives some pretty impressive imitations of Old Faithful.
A friend of mine has a brand new Yanmar 2GM in his Westerly GK29, also
on a short shaft. He's had some pretty impressive squirts, too, with
the Lasdrop.
Neither one of us has removed the Lasdrop, however.
djc
|
443.16 | Potential problem with Deep Sea Seal | ESPO01::NEALE | Who can, do - who can't, consult | Thu Jan 20 1994 13:19 | 16 |
| I am not sure just how close the Lasdrop design is to the Deep Sea Seal sold in
the UK, but there was a warning letter published last week in one of the UK
sailing magazines re the DSS.
The problem is that the two halves of the seal can stick together so strongly if
left motionless for a long period (like a winter ashore?) that the next time the
prop shaft turns it rips the neoprene boot rather than the two halves of the
seal sliding against each other. This can be embarrassing...
According to the letter, the manufacturer recommends that the seal is parted
briefly by hand to ensure that the halves are not stuck, but I do not remember
seeing anything of the kind in the instructions that came with mine.
Isn't technology wonderful?
- Brian
|