ongolo
07-26-2003, 02:18 AM
Hi all,
I am building a 55ft steel schooner (gaff) and it is virtually al coming to an end.
From the beginning I was not happy with stuffing box/cutlass idea. The boat has been designed to look at an iceberg in the southern atlantic one day (hopefully NOT TOO closely) and all systems on board must be serviceable at remote locations. So I have been podering and over the years have drawn various designs. I even obtained the out dated drawings of South Africa Navy/ French built Submarines to what they do. I have worked on a japanese built research vessel which used a German system colled SIMPLEX seals. These are best imagined as overgrown oil seals as used in cars wheels, gear boxes andengines etc.
Then I was given plans of what some french yachts use, they use a series of roller bearings with three oil seas on bothe ends of the sterntube, the sahft running in an oil bath with a header tank. The French using even mild steel shafts at times. Using more than one bearing (unless they are matched pairs) is sensless and even if they are matched, the potential slight misalignement makes (in my opinion) the use of deep grove ball bearings a disadvantage.
So, I have designd and turned all parts ready for assembly and welding the last bits together.
I use self-aligning roller bearings with a taper adaptor
Three oil seals either end with lantern rings to facilitate lubrication of the outer seals until these get over time lubricated by seepage from within.
The system is designed that seals and bearings could be replaced under water, but this would require extensive flushing out afterwards. The inner seals could be changed without much effort, except the mess of draining the oil.
If the system should fail, a vesconite or teflon cutlass bearing is carried anyway and can be inserted in place of bearings and oil seals.
A stuffing box and packing can replace the inner assembly.
I could have made all parts smaller and more streamlined, but using needle bearings would have given problems with alignment I believe.
Does anybody here have an opinion on that system as such? The advantages of all this is a dry bilge.
:confused: :confused:
I am building a 55ft steel schooner (gaff) and it is virtually al coming to an end.
From the beginning I was not happy with stuffing box/cutlass idea. The boat has been designed to look at an iceberg in the southern atlantic one day (hopefully NOT TOO closely) and all systems on board must be serviceable at remote locations. So I have been podering and over the years have drawn various designs. I even obtained the out dated drawings of South Africa Navy/ French built Submarines to what they do. I have worked on a japanese built research vessel which used a German system colled SIMPLEX seals. These are best imagined as overgrown oil seals as used in cars wheels, gear boxes andengines etc.
Then I was given plans of what some french yachts use, they use a series of roller bearings with three oil seas on bothe ends of the sterntube, the sahft running in an oil bath with a header tank. The French using even mild steel shafts at times. Using more than one bearing (unless they are matched pairs) is sensless and even if they are matched, the potential slight misalignement makes (in my opinion) the use of deep grove ball bearings a disadvantage.
So, I have designd and turned all parts ready for assembly and welding the last bits together.
I use self-aligning roller bearings with a taper adaptor
Three oil seals either end with lantern rings to facilitate lubrication of the outer seals until these get over time lubricated by seepage from within.
The system is designed that seals and bearings could be replaced under water, but this would require extensive flushing out afterwards. The inner seals could be changed without much effort, except the mess of draining the oil.
If the system should fail, a vesconite or teflon cutlass bearing is carried anyway and can be inserted in place of bearings and oil seals.
A stuffing box and packing can replace the inner assembly.
I could have made all parts smaller and more streamlined, but using needle bearings would have given problems with alignment I believe.
Does anybody here have an opinion on that system as such? The advantages of all this is a dry bilge.
:confused: :confused: