Marine electronics

Turning Point Propellers

The right prop transforms how a boat runs. Turning Point makes aluminum and stainless props in every size, pitch, and rotation. Match diameter, pitch, and hub to your engine. A propeller is where engine power meets the water, and the right one fixes a sluggish hole shot or a motor that will not reach its rated RPM. Turning Point builds aluminum and stainless props with an interchangeable hub system, in the full range of diameters, pitches, and rotations. Choosing right comes down to reading the prop size, picking the material and blade count, and dialing pitch to your engine. Read the prop size: diameter x pitch Props are listed as diameter by pitch, like 14.25 x 19. Diameter is the...

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The right prop transforms how a boat runs. Turning Point makes aluminum and stainless props in every size, pitch, and rotation. Match diameter, pitch, and hub to your engine.

A propeller is where engine power meets the water, and the right one fixes a sluggish hole shot or a motor that will not reach its rated RPM. Turning Point builds aluminum and stainless props with an interchangeable hub system, in the full range of diameters, pitches, and rotations. Choosing right comes down to reading the prop size, picking the material and blade count, and dialing pitch to your engine.

Read the prop size: diameter x pitch

Props are listed as diameter by pitch, like 14.25 x 19. Diameter is the circle the blades sweep, set mostly by your engine and gearcase. Pitch is the distance the prop would travel in one turn, and it is your main tuning lever. The number you change to fix performance is almost always the pitch.

Pitch sets your RPM

Lower pitch spins the engine faster for a stronger hole shot and better load-carrying, while higher pitch gives more top speed but pulls RPM down. The goal is to land your wide-open-throttle RPM in the engine maker's recommended range with a normal load. As a rule, each inch of pitch changes WOT RPM by roughly 150 to 200, so if you are over or under, adjust pitch to bring it into range.

Aluminum or stainless

Aluminum props are affordable and fine for everyday use, and they sacrifice themselves to protect the gearcase on a strike. Stainless props are stiffer and thinner, which improves speed, grip, and acceleration, and they hold up better, though they cost more. Heavier and faster boats benefit most from stainless.

Blade count and rotation

Three-blade props are the all-around choice with good top speed, while four-blade props improve hole shot, mid-range, and grip in rough water at a small top-speed cost. Rotation matters too: single engines use a right-hand prop, and twins use one right and one left, so confirm rotation before ordering.

Match the hub

Turning Point uses interchangeable hub kits, so one prop fits many engines with the correct hub. Confirm your engine and gearcase so you order the right hub kit with the prop.

Not sure which prop your boat needs? Tell our crew your engine, gearcase, current prop, and WOT RPM, and we will match the diameter, pitch, material, and hub to get you in the right RPM range.

Frequently Asked Questions

What do the propeller numbers mean?

Props are listed as diameter by pitch, like 14.25 x 19. Diameter is the circle the blades sweep, set by your engine and gearcase. Pitch is how far the prop moves in one turn and is your main tuning lever for performance.

How does pitch affect performance?

Lower pitch spins the engine faster for a stronger hole shot and load-carrying, while higher pitch gives more top speed but lowers RPM. Aim to land your wide-open-throttle RPM in the engine maker's recommended range. Each inch of pitch changes WOT RPM by roughly 150 to 200.

Aluminum or stainless propeller?

Aluminum is affordable and fine for everyday use and protects the gearcase on a strike. Stainless is stiffer and thinner for better speed, grip, and acceleration and lasts longer, though it costs more. Faster, heavier boats benefit most from stainless.

Three-blade or four-blade?

Three-blade props give good all-around top speed, while four-blade props improve hole shot, mid-range, and grip in rough water at a small top-speed cost. Choose four-blade if you carry loads or want stern lift.

How do I pick the right rotation and hub?

Single engines use a right-hand prop, and twins use one right and one left, so confirm rotation. Turning Point uses interchangeable hub kits, so confirm your engine and gearcase to order the correct hub with the prop.

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