Son dove under boat w/scuba next day and found no fouled line, but a nickel-size chunk of prop blade missing at tip.. (quote from initial thread)
I just hope the prop shaft isn't bent, too.
Yep, for sure. No doubt you'll pull the shaft & have it checked. But I would guess the shaft was probably not bent since so little of it extends beyond the cutlass bearing. More likely the combination of the prop being out of balance & the shock loads on the tranny likely damaged the cone clutch (not that I'm familiar with the inner workings of marine transissions)
Chunk out of the prop looks bigger than a nickel. No wonder, that would have thrown it way out of balance. Looks like you've got your work cut out for you, but should be relatively straight forward repair beside needing a new prop.
This could well have happened to us, only instead of being a short towing distance from a nearby home marina we were on an island in another country many miles from where our trailer was parked. And where our trailer was parked was itself over 1,500 miles from home. We had run up on a shoal of very sharp jagged rocks near low tide (as it was at the time and lucky for us was on a rising tide with a 9 foot range) that was less than 2 feet under the surface. I guess it was also lucky that it was as shallow as it was since we struck on shallower part of the keel with the brunt of the impact well forward of the prop. If we'd been rendered inoperable or worse we would have had to take a ferry back to Anacortes, take a bus to Blaine to get our truck & trailer & put it on the ferry going back over to Vancouver Island, go through customs, load boat on the trailer and take the ferry back stateside, clear US customs, bringing an abrupt and very expensive end to our vacation. As it was, we had been loitering around through a mooring field at idle speed (the Admiral had the helm) waiting for our friends to clear Canadian customs at nearby Van Isle marina in Tsehum Harbour which, being our first time there, we were not familiar with. We were hard aground & the first thing I did was shut the engine down & make no attempt to back off, fearing exactly what happened to your boat. Instead I launched our dinghy, put the 2.5 HP outboard on it & attempted tow us off. That didn't work at first, as we were stuck fast. But the tide was on the rise, so within a half hour we could feel the boat start to rock. I took a boat hook & went around the sides of the boat in the dinghy taking "soundings" to see where the deeper water was, which behind the boat was over 3 feet deep. So I then tied the dinghy off to the aft starboard quarter, facing it aft & gunned the outboard & she finally floated free, no damage to the prop. When we got back to the ramp to haul out at the end of the cruise the only damage to be seen was number of small nicks & dings in the gelcoat along the bottom of the keel, but no damage to the prop, rudder, or skeg.
tsehum.jpg
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