I am getting the butterflies just thinking about it.

MJ
Moderators: bman, Chalk, Tom Keels
Depends on how bad it is and I know that's a rather obscure answer. If it's not to bad TC has a technique involving a sledge hammer that has worked for him. I modified his approach a bit by hanging a plumb bob from the cavitation plate with the motor tilted up. Positioned the plumb bob where it was pointing to the center of the shaft (small hole in the end) and used that to determine how much it was off. I ended up having the shaft replaced but like I said TC's method will work if it's not real bad but be careful that you don't create more damage than you start out withWhat has to be done to fix the wobble in the prop? New shaft?