stuffing tube with or without teflon liner?

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • runzwithsizorz
    Senior Member
    • Jan 2009
    • 896

    #16
    For those of you that have run both, is the teflon a little less noisy/loud? The quite tree lined lake I run at just echos loudly! The first time I was there, a park ranger came out of his office, and drove over to see
    what was causing so much noise.

    Comment

    • iridebikes247
      Fast Electric Addict!
      • Dec 2011
      • 1449

      #17
      I don't think I ever remove them or inspect them. I mainly run german cats and all have a year of use on them with their current setup, have never changed teflon. I'm sure if I pulled them out I would notice a little bit of wear. As you already know I'm sure, the stuffing tube and collet alignment is super important and could probably screw up a liner if it was off.

      As for the CA glue trick, I think I've used silicone too, anything that just shims the space and makes the fit a bit tighter can't hurt. Cracking it out is definitely easy when its time to remove, just fold the liner with a pair of needle nose pliers.
      Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSr...6EH3l3zT6mWHsw

      Comment

      • siberianhusky
        Fast Electric Addict!
        • Dec 2009
        • 2187

        #18
        I've never run teflon, never will, actually re did the stuffing tubes on the only rtr boats I have just to get away from it.
        I just think it's something to fail, another added bit of maintenance.
        Plus there is more drag with it than without, your flex coils up slightly inside the stuffing tube and only contacts the stuffing tube at a couple points along it's length when under load. Can't see how there would be less drag with more contact area, just doesn't work that way.
        Think I've been playing with boats about 35 years or so, still have my very first boat, never worn out a brass stuffing tube or flex cable without teflon.
        And none of my boats leak any water up the stuffing tube.
        If my boats upside down then who owns the one I thought I was driving the last two laps?

        Comment

        • Fluid
          Fast and Furious
          • Apr 2007
          • 8012

          #19
          More wasted bandwidth on an over-discussed topic because the Search function was not used.



          http://forums.offshoreelectrics.com/...ghlight=teflon

          http://forums.offshoreelectrics.com/...ghlight=teflon

          http://forums.offshoreelectrics.com/...ghlight=teflon

          http://forums.offshoreelectrics.com/...ghlight=teflon

          http://forums.offshoreelectrics.com/...ghlight=teflon

          http://forums.offshoreelectrics.com/...ghlight=teflon

          http://forums.offshoreelectrics.com/...ghlight=teflon

          http://forums.offshoreelectrics.com/...ghlight=teflon



          and on and on....



          .
          ERROR 403 - This is not the page you are looking for

          Comment

          • DeltaForceMan
            Old No 7
            • Dec 2014
            • 101

            #20
            Weeeeelllll ssooooorrrryyy.... :)
            Good times had by all!

            Comment

            • flraptor07
              Fast Electric Addict!
              • Aug 2013
              • 2451

              #21
              No liners, never will, one more thing to go wrong. I have seen melted teflon on a high RPM boat, and I don't think you'll see many saw guys using teflon or most serious racers. Also I've never seen or heard of a stuff tube wearing out from not using teflon.
              Last edited by flraptor07; 01-03-2015, 05:06 PM.

              Comment

              • keithbradley
                Fast Electric Addict!
                • Jul 2010
                • 3663

                #22
                Originally posted by flraptor07
                I don't think you'll see any saw guys using teflon or most serious racers.
                What would give you that idea?
                www.keithbradleyboats.com

                Comment

                • flraptor07
                  Fast Electric Addict!
                  • Aug 2013
                  • 2451

                  #23
                  Originally posted by keithbradley
                  What would give you that idea?
                  Just what I've been told in the past, and what I've seen in other boats.

                  Comment

                  • NativePaul
                    Greased Weasel
                    • Feb 2008
                    • 2760

                    #24
                    I have only tried a flexshaft without a PTFE liner once, with most of my previous boats being PTFE lined flexies and some being wires. When I built my JAE.21FE I used the Zipkits hardware and followed the instructions in having no liner, knowing it is done often in the states I gave it a go but found it to be very noisy after the first run and it needed re-greasing not after every raceday as I had heard, but after every heat. Running several classes and doing duties for several more classes it took too long as I have better things to do on my race days than grease up my shaft and tube 3 times so I redid the layout and swapped to a wire drive in the end.

                    Most of my recent boats have been wire drives and I do prefer it to flexies where it is practical (to have a large radius curve in the drive), but I will continue to use PTFE lined flexies where I need a tighter bend, but I will never run an unlined flex again.

                    Mine being such high maintenance may be because my heats are longer than they are in the states at over 5 minutes each vs <2 minutes, or it may be because I am spinning higher RPMs than most in the states, or that my smaller props don't make the flex coil up to get the smaller contact points referred to above (if that is a good thing, my gut tells me that those smaller contact points must be at a higher pressure and the drag at least as much). Whatever the reason, when it comes to flexies there is not enough difference in drag (if it exists at all, and in whatever direction) for me to discount the ease of use of a water lubricated PTFE lined flex shaft, which just needs taking out, drying and oiling after a raceday, then putting back in for the next raceday.

                    I have never worn out or melted a PTFE liner, I used to check them in pre-season maintenance but stopped after a while as it seemed pointless when I never saw any significant wear, typically my boats don't see more than 5 seasons of racing and many of them are redesigned and replaced with a new version after a lot less than that, I don't really have a local Lake I can use any more and rarely run outside of races now so I probably do only 50 runs a year per boat, if my PTFE was going to melt after 250 runs I would never find out. I guess a sport boater that lives on a lake, runs most days and will never get their boat damaged from buoy strikes or boat rubbing and doesn't have to compete with that new hull that just came out, will have different values wanting several thousands of runs.
                    Paul Upton-Taylor, Greased Weasel Racing.

                    Comment

                    • keithbradley
                      Fast Electric Addict!
                      • Jul 2010
                      • 3663

                      #25
                      Originally posted by flraptor07
                      Just what I've been told in the past, and what I've seen in other boats.
                      I think you have it backward. There are always exceptions, but when it comes to 100mph+ boats, I think the majority are running Teflon.
                      www.keithbradleyboats.com

                      Comment

                      • DeltaForceMan
                        Old No 7
                        • Dec 2014
                        • 101

                        #26
                        You know what... i think the search function can take a back seat to new users.
                        Good times had by all!

                        Comment

                        • Doug Smock
                          Moderator
                          • Apr 2007
                          • 5272

                          #27
                          Originally posted by keithbradley
                          I think you have it backward. There are always exceptions, but when it comes to 100mph+ boats, I think the majority are running Teflon.
                          This is based on what?
                          MODEL BOAT RACER
                          IMPBA President
                          District 13 Director 2011- present
                          IMPBA National Records Director 2009-2019
                          IMPBA 19887L CD
                          NAMBA 1169

                          Comment

                          • Jeff Wohlt
                            Fast Electric Addict!
                            • Jan 2008
                            • 2716

                            #28
                            I do like teflon for the wire drives. I do not always use it but it does keep the wire from rubbing on the brass and possibly wearing the wire. IF you set wire drives up right it basically should hardly touch any wall of the stuffing tube so your resistance is less than a cable trying to go straight when wound up....that is why they are better for most--- but not all hulls. For the Spartan 6s we are having better results with the 078 wire drives than the cables. In the old days we would sand our cables to make them smoother. Never hurt strength but we also did not have the power we have today.
                            www.rcraceboat.com

                            [email protected]

                            Comment

                            • Shooter
                              Team Mojo
                              • Jun 2009
                              • 2558

                              #29
                              I use teflon liners in all my boats with very very thin lube. IMO, the clearance with the 1/4" brass and 0.187" flex (no teflon) is excessive.

                              Comment

                              • Chilli
                                Fast Electric Addict!
                                • Jan 2008
                                • 3070

                                #30
                                Originally posted by Doug Smock
                                This is based on what?
                                It ain't the IMPBA record books. We've run with four of the six guys that hold current records over 100 mph in Liz City and I don't know any that use teflon. Then again you're the records director so what would you know??... LOL

                                To the OP, use what you want. Both work fine. I've run both. IMO- Run without. One less thing to worry about.

                                To runzwithsizorz's, My flex makes a racket when I give the throttle a little goose after first plugging in to make sure everything is working. I've never noticed extra noise when the boat is in the water and there is a load on the prop.
                                Mike Chirillo
                                www.capitolrcmodelboats.com

                                Comment

                                Working...