Does the prop shaft not have to be torqued? And if so is there a common torque value? Also when I am disassembling something and I want to get it re-assembled the exact same way, I will put indicating marks with a magic marker or a paint marker so everything lines up the way I took it apart.
Bassmaster Florida Not entirely true... You can use a pin twice... Whichever was bent previously, change to the other. After that no more. Even though metal fatigue is quite low in the pins... Like you said, better than a new prop.
Torque to 40 lines up perfect
Nice demo, thanks for taking the time and sharing!!
Does the prop shaft not have to be torqued? And if so is there a common torque value?
Also when I am disassembling something and I want to get it re-assembled the exact same way, I will put indicating marks with a magic marker or a paint marker so everything lines up the way I took it apart.
Thanks for the tips they were very helpful!
Thank you for the comment Jem.
is it coddle pin or coulder pin? cotter maybe
NEVER use the same cotter pin, 50 cents is much cheaper than a new prop
Bassmaster Florida Not entirely true... You can use a pin twice... Whichever was bent previously, change to the other. After that no more. Even though metal fatigue is quite low in the pins... Like you said, better than a new prop.
2005 Suzuki DF150 zk7 (11 years)
3 impellers , 3 water housing gaskets, 15 drain plug washers.....ONE cotter pin.
one Kotter pin lasting a lifetime priceless
@@thomastirolflorida5363don’t push it… I’m watching this video for a reason. Lost my prop last week likely bc of the cotter pin likely
Think he over tighten that no need for s such a large breaker bar
Good helpful video I could tell there was no editing to that video
Thank you Randy. We like to share raw unedited videos some times. Not everyone lines the pin hole the first or second time. Keeping it real.
Same as below never ever use same cotter pin
Ever heard of a torque wrench👎