Hi all,
I have been fixing up the subject outboard (with help from this site) as well as a 1981 Mirrocraft 14'. I got the long shaft motor for pretty cheap so when I was replacing the transom on the boat I updated it from 15 --> 20". Well apparently it should be 22" because my cavitation plate is currently sitting ~2.5" below the bottom of the boat. I've read a jack plate will solve this but they're rather $$$. Can I not just make a spacer to raise the outboard up and then bolt it through the transom? Or would a jack plate be a better option and why? The transom itself is 2 sheets of marine ply, glued and screwed, then stained and sealed with numerous coats of the Old Timers Formula. All holes were over-drilled, epoxy filled and then re-drilled appropriately. I wouldn't be able to do this same amount of prevention in drilling thru the transom as-is, but would do my best to seal it up tight with marine sealant.
Thanks again for the support!
I have been fixing up the subject outboard (with help from this site) as well as a 1981 Mirrocraft 14'. I got the long shaft motor for pretty cheap so when I was replacing the transom on the boat I updated it from 15 --> 20". Well apparently it should be 22" because my cavitation plate is currently sitting ~2.5" below the bottom of the boat. I've read a jack plate will solve this but they're rather $$$. Can I not just make a spacer to raise the outboard up and then bolt it through the transom? Or would a jack plate be a better option and why? The transom itself is 2 sheets of marine ply, glued and screwed, then stained and sealed with numerous coats of the Old Timers Formula. All holes were over-drilled, epoxy filled and then re-drilled appropriately. I wouldn't be able to do this same amount of prevention in drilling thru the transom as-is, but would do my best to seal it up tight with marine sealant.
Thanks again for the support!