Go Back   Forum Index > Shared Forums > Ask All Sailors

Ask All Sailors This forum is for owners of ALL sailboats. It's shared by Hunter, Catalina, Beneteau, MacGregor, O'Day, and other owners. For questions and comments specific to your brand of boat, please use the appropriate forum.

Reply

 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 11-03-2009, 09:54 am   #1  (permalink
sailfree
Catalina 30
Bay City

 
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 14
sailfree hasn't generated any comments yet, may be new around here
Dripless Packing

Has anyone used this type of shaft packing?

GFO Fiber Packing
Virtually Dripless marine shaft packing
Pack it and forget it.
www.e-marine-inc.com/products/gfopacking/packing.html

Does it work as advertised? If the ads are true, this seems like a great product.
Also, it’s much cheaper than the Drip-Less moldable packing kit, or the Packless shaft seals.

sailfree is offline  
Old 11-03-2009, 10:03 am   #2  (permalink
Blitz
Seidelmann 34
Highlands, New Jersey

 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 130
Blitz hasn't generated any comments yet, may be new around here
Re: Dripless Packing

I have used it for the packing on the prop shaft and it worked great this past season. Virtually Dripless, just as they claim. I did not use it on the rudder shaft.

__________________
Neal
Coastal water near Sandy Hook, NJ
1984 Seidelmann 34 "Blitz"
Blitz is offline  
Old 11-03-2009, 10:18 am   #3  (permalink
sailfree
Catalina 30
Bay City

 
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 14
sailfree hasn't generated any comments yet, may be new around here
Re: Dripless Packing

Thanks for the input Neal. I'll try some.

sailfree is offline  
Old 11-03-2009, 10:36 am   #4  (permalink
Rick Sylvester
Hunter 40
St. Petersburg

 
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 247
Rick Sylvester hasn't generated any comments yet, may be new around here
Yup. Love it.

It works great. Had it for 5 years now. Not a drop and it runs cool.

Follow the directions carefully, including break in.

I've heard some less than stellar comments about the moldable stuff but I don't have experience with it.

Rick Sylvester is offline  
Old 11-03-2009, 11:50 am   #5  (permalink
Stu Jackson
Catalina 34
C34 San Francisco

 
Stu Jackson's Avatar
 
Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 6,350
Stu Jackson is a pretty decent person
Info

here's some info maybe you know already, also links to Maine Sail's article.

http://www.c34.org/wiki/index.php?ti...ng_box_packing

Stu Jackson is offline  
Old 11-03-2009, 01:27 pm   #6  (permalink
Maine Sail
Canadian Sailcraft 36T
Casco Bay, ME

Moderator
 
Maine Sail's Avatar
 
Joined: Feb 1999
Posts: 3,013
Maine Sail is well regarded Maine Sail is well regarded

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rick Sylvester View Post
It works great. Had it for 5 years now. Not a drop and it runs cool.
Rick you really need to be careful running it totally drip free. This photo is crevice corrosion that was caused by a totally sealed shaft where the water in the log became devoid of oxygen. I know everyone always wants totally dripless but it can sometimes come at a cost.

__________________
_________
-Maine Sail


Casco Bay, Maine
Canadian Sailcraft 36T

Our Sailing Photo Galleries (LINK)

Maine Sail is offline  
Old 11-03-2009, 07:16 pm   #7  (permalink
Blitz
Seidelmann 34
Highlands, New Jersey

 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 130
Blitz hasn't generated any comments yet, may be new around here
Re: Dripless Packing

Has anyone used it on the rudder shaft?

__________________
Neal
Coastal water near Sandy Hook, NJ
1984 Seidelmann 34 "Blitz"
Blitz is offline  
Old 11-03-2009, 07:42 pm   #8  (permalink
Ed Schenck
Hunter 37-cutter
Port Richey, FL

 
Ed Schenck's Avatar
 
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,830
Ed Schenck is a pretty decent person
Re: Dripless Packing

Shouldn't be necessary on the rudder shaft. You can tighten the rudder stuffing box to stop any drips with the cheapest of packings. There is not the fast rotation that requires any lubrication. But if you wanted to put in something like GFO dripless it would work well. On most boats the stuffing box is above waterline anyway. It might go below on acceleration or when powered with a crew in the cockpit.

Ed Schenck is offline  
Old 11-04-2009, 05:40 am   #9  (permalink
sailfree
Catalina 30
Bay City

 
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 14
sailfree hasn't generated any comments yet, may be new around here

Anyone,

If you've had good luck with the GFO (Gore) packing how did you cut the rings?
I can think of three ways to do it. They could be cut square, at an angle to the
axis of the shaft, or at an angle radially. The web site doesn't say. Are there
instructions with the product?


Quote:
Originally Posted by Rick Sylvester View Post
It works great. Had it for 5 years now. Not a drop and it runs cool.

Follow the directions carefully, including break in.

I've heard some less than stellar comments about the moldable stuff but I don't have experience with it.

sailfree is offline  
Old 11-04-2009, 06:01 am   #10  (permalink
Ed Schenck
Hunter 37-cutter
Port Richey, FL

 
Ed Schenck's Avatar
 
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,830
Ed Schenck is a pretty decent person
Re: Dripless Packing

I use GFO and cut it just like I did the old stuff, at an angle. I wrap a length around the shaft stretched and overlapped. Then with a very sharp blade cut the angle arcoss both. It is pretty pliable so two rings with the joints non-adjacent are not going to leak.

Ed Schenck is offline  
Old 11-04-2009, 07:29 am   #11  (permalink
John T1594
Hunter 340
Forked River, NJ H340

 
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 353
John T1594 hasn't generated any comments yet, may be new around here
Re: Dripless Packing

I have used the GFO packing for a number of years and it seems to work well. I did find that it seemed to compress more than the regular flax packing and I had a tough time tightening the stuffing box enough to keep the drip rate down. I eventually added two extra rings of packing (total of 5) and that works well for me. I am on my fifth year with the packing and wondering if it should be changed.

John T1594 is offline  
Old 11-04-2009, 07:52 am   #12  (permalink
Maine Sail
Canadian Sailcraft 36T
Casco Bay, ME

Moderator
 
Maine Sail's Avatar
 
Joined: Feb 1999
Posts: 3,013
Maine Sail is well regarded Maine Sail is well regarded
Read this

Quote:
Originally Posted by sailfree View Post
Anyone,

If you've had good luck with the GFO (Gore) packing how did you cut the rings?
I can think of three ways to do it. They could be cut square, at an angle to the
axis of the shaft, or at an angle radially. The web site doesn't say. Are there
instructions with the product?
Feel free to read this article. It will show you how to cut it;

Re-Packing A Traditional Stuffing Box (LINK)

__________________
_________
-Maine Sail


Casco Bay, Maine
Canadian Sailcraft 36T

Our Sailing Photo Galleries (LINK)

Maine Sail is offline  
Old 11-05-2009, 06:48 pm   #13  (permalink
NYSail
Pearson P36-2
Mt. Sinai, NY

 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 550
NYSail hasn't generated any comments yet, may be new around here
Re: Dripless Packing

Love the GFO. I have used it for 4 years now and just started having a drip. I am going to redo this winter.... Shaft also looks fine.

NYSail is offline  
Reply

Go Back   Forum Index > Shared Forums > Ask All Sailors

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 02:13 am.


Visit our store at
MacGregorOwners.com...

30% off custom embroidered sportswear
Polos, jackets, sweatshirts... mens, womens, childrens... all with NO minimum, NO setup fees, super-saver prices!

15% off unbreakable engraved drinkware SALE
Bulletproof Lexan drinkware engraved with your boat name. Wine, champagne, beer, tumblers, pitchers, more.

Solar/wind charger
Charge cell phone, MP3 players, cameras, more, without AC or DC power!

15% off butcherblock stove top cutting board
Our butcher block stove top cover is a true work of art! Turn your stove top into useable counter.

Halyard retriever
Don\'t go up the mast! Also works as a handy grapling hook. Sturdy stainless construction.