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#11
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no luck on the dropping of the motors to the lowest hole - may even be worse. had 25 mph winds so it was too choppy to do too much of a trial but it I was out long enough to figure out this is not the correct setup. I also put my 300 pound son along with my wife and daughter in the bow and this is not helping.
My trim tabs appear to be 12x12 and working fine. There is nothing dragging under my boat - the transducer shoots thru hull - I am pretty sure the motors are dragging tho. I have added a bunch of pictures to my photobucket that I took yesterday the links are below. I appreciate any feedback. 4 photos are of the boat at rest in the water with motors all the way down- I have on board 90 pounds of lead in the bow, 100 gals of fuel, 3 batteries, and a cooler with drinks. I have some others pics of the props themselves, and how the motors are mounted etc with them all the way down and on the trailer. http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0436.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0437.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0438.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0439.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0435.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0428.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0427.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0426.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0425.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0424.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0429.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0431.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0432.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0433.jpg http://i962.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMG_0434.jpg thanks in advance! Steve
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Lobo1 Focus on the journey - not the destination.... |
#12
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Put a straight 2x4 along the hull bottom directly in front of the lower unit to see where the cavitation plate sits in relation to the hull bottom.
It's hard to tell from your photos, but if it is as it appears, I'd say you're mounted with your cavitation plates almost dead even with the hull bottom, and that's about 3 to 4 inches too low. Your cavitation problem in turns would then be (in part) a result of having your cavitation plate causing excessive turbulence from running too deep. Use the straight 2x4 as a straight edge along the hull back to the lower unit, and, with your engines at neutral trim, put the engines where the cavitation plate is about 3" to 3 1/2" above the straight edge. That's usually a pretty good starting place. Hopefully Peter B will chime in about where his were mounted.
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Common Sense is learning from your mistakes. Wisdom is learning from the other guy's mistakes. Fr. Frank says: Jesus liked fishing, too. He even walked on water to get to the boat! Currently without a SeaCraft ![]() (2) Pompano 12' fishing kayaks '73 Cobia 18' prototype "Casting Skiff", 70hp Mercury |
#13
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IMHO....
In this picture ![]() I think yammie did this on purpose to overcome the additional weight of the 4 strokes, to get the boats on plane faster, so they reverse angle it. Once you get on plane, try trimming up some and see if it helps keep it in the water. The bow should get lighter, and the stern should stay in the water better. I bet this rig is a handfull in a following sea set up like that. It is really hard to set the height from a picture, but I am pretty sure your motors are too low, not too high. You might want to talk to armstrong, they were helpful when I was setting mine up. BTW, the water comes up about a little over an inch for every 12"'s of setback on the motor. Put a straight edge on the bottom of the hull extending back, and I would mount the cavitation plates 2.5"'s above that line. |
#14
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I agree, they look too low. I would try raising them, remove the foils,and work with someone on props to dial it in. The 4 blade has helped mine.
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#15
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will take a straight board and a level with me tomorrow and then have them raise them up. Will take one hole up just to get it back to where it was - so I will either go two or all 3 holes up this time.
it is a bear in a following sea. i am not comfortable with it at all - makes me a bit nervous actually..... ![]() one of my favorite spots to fish this time of year is about 19 miles offshore in Lake Michigan - I cant go out there with this boat like it is.
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Lobo1 Focus on the journey - not the destination.... |
#16
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Get those motors at the right height, and than use your trim to get the motors into a neutral, vs negative trim state. It would really help to have someone drive the boat so you can look at the cavitation plates. If you can, shoot some pictures looking down at the plate while it is running. |
#17
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I will have the motors raised up a few holes - I can trim the motors to neutral. For 70 bucks I'll certainly add the wedges but cant seem to make my brain understand the additional benefit I will gain - above and beyond trimming the motors to a neutral position.
thanks again, steve
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Lobo1 Focus on the journey - not the destination.... |
#18
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It's my undertanding the wedges were designed (unless mounted upside down) to increase negative trim, which you appear to have plenty.
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#19
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I think wedges can go either way, negative or positive. I am not an expert on them. The boat I am thinking of was an older 31 contendor with 225 4S yammies, and I remember looking at it on the trailer and the motors looked like these, tucked under the bracket. I think he installed something that when the motor were trimmed down, they would be in a neutral vs negative trim state.
The idea is that when the motors are trimmed all the way down, the motors will have a neutral trim, in that the cavitation plates are paralell to the water they are running through. The water coming off the back of that boat is not flat, it is angled up about 10 or so degrees, or at least it was on mine. I moved my motor up and down on that bracket serveral times, and played with the trim to get it right. Obviously, start by running with the trimmed up so that the cavitation plates are paralell to the water. This is hard to do without 2 people. I used a camera to shoot pictures of where the water was hitting. The key is to get the height in the ball park, then dial in the trim. I would start by using a straightedge off the bottom to the cavitation plate, and mount the motors so the cavitation plates are at least 2"'s above that line. |
#20
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Lobo, You got me thinkin'....
My single (on aluminum 30" setback bracket) cavitation plate is 3" above keel. This mounted in top bracket hole, 2nd hole down on motor. Looking at your pictures and thinking here, I believe your foils are acting like sails against the water when coming off a wave and preventing the motors to go "under" water momentarily, allowing the props to have little or no water to "bite". I believe setting the cav plates correctly, removing the foils, adding (or changing) to a cupped prop (and probably 4 blades) will help tremendously. One more afterthought.... I had the pleasure of running a 23' Triton w/twin 150 HPDI's for a few seasons. Those motors ran best when mounted "goofy foot", opposite of yours. |
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