Quote:
Originally Posted by SailorChlud
. . . In your reply you suggested a mounting height of 3/4 inch above the keel for the AV plate, but in other posts I have seen owner recommendations to try a bit higher - 1.5 inches? I need to instruct the dealer where to put the mounting bolts to give me some adjustment room, so should I use 3/4 inch as the lower bound, and 2 inches as the upper?
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How high you can run the motor really depends on the prop, as some props can run higher than others depending on how much cupping they have. I originally mounted my 115 with the plate flush with the bottom, but when I bought the SST prop, they said I could raise the motor 1 hole (3/4"), so I did and I picked up about 3 mph! This was way before I learned up about getting AV plate on top of clean water, so I don't really know if the AV plate was above clean water on my 115 set at 3/4". I just know that it ran much better there than flush. May have been able to run it even higher, but I never tried that. I did notice that I had to run with the motor trimmed down more to keep the prop from blowing out in rough seas, so I'm sure raising it more would have made that worse.
If your motor is like my E-TEC which has 4 holes, spaced 3/4" apart, if you mounted it so AV plate is flush when mounted in top hole (No.1), that would give you the following options on AV plate height:
Hole # - AV plate height
1 - 0.0
2 - 0.75"
3 - 1.50"
4 - 2.25"
Seems like this would be fairly conservative but still give you a decent range of heights and allow you to run anything from a cheap aluminum prop to a radical highly cupped prop. If you plan to only run a good SS prop, you might be able to set 0.75" as the min height.
Capt. Terry went through this on his Seafari in the last year or so and said his AV plate is on top of the water, but can't remember if he's at .75 or 1.5" height, as I think he's tried both settings, so we need to get Terry's input on this.