pawnshopmike
Staff member
I only use Grade A Certified Rubber Prop bolts. Works just like prop saver bands.
Been there, done that. Luckily I had a nice pick in my field box and we found a tiny little hammer in the Quonset hut at the field and I was able to remove them there. Thankfully they weren't Loctited or the 200 would have been on it's way back to DA.Once I removed the prop from the hub, the three broken bolts were a couple of threads deep into the hub so I was unable to get a grip and back them out. I don’t carry the tools to deal with something like this to the field so my day was done. The pic below shows the broken pieces, probably about 12-15mm length.
As a plumber I tighten things up constantly. I have never used a torque wrench on prop bolts and never had a bolt come loose either. Perhaps a good feeling for tight is working for me.
All very interesting my single question is what or who's torque wrench are you using. Very interested to know. One question do you torque your carbon and wood props differently.
I use the 1/4" drive torque wrench from Harbor Freight; very economical. If I remember correctly their +\- tolerance is 4 percent. When I purchased mine I checked it with the calibrated torque wrenches at work. It was dead on accurate through the mid-range settings; 30-80 inch pounds. At the extreme high and low settings it was within the 4 percent error. I've had it for several years and it has been trouble free. For installing cylinder head bolts, spark plugs, crank case bolts, and prop bolts it work great.
There are certainly more expensive wrenches (Craftsman, Snap-on, CDI and more) and if I used a torque wrench on a daily basis I'd most likely have one that may be better quality.