Gee, I'd never seen one of those connectors in my 71 years of life. We didn't use them at NASA.Gee, push it with a finger towards the front or back, I forget which way. It just clips on the bottom and pivots on top. It doesn't seem secure, but it is.
Pipe wrench on tube, or just unbolt the front steering tube from the transom clamp. I use a single cable on my Speedboat with a V6.
Thanks guys. My buddy came over last night and got the cable off for me. Yes, he used a big wrench to tighten the jam nuts. Then he turned the steering wheel hard over until it stripped the internals. After that, he used an angle grinder and cut it off.tha two large nuts on tha tube on either side of tha bracket need ta be jammed as tight as you can get them up against tha bracket and each other.. with that done tha large nut on tha cable should come loose........................ if that doesn't work then tha pipe wrench (not recommended) will come to tha party..
Yup. He just cut the cable itself. The engine is being moved to another boat and I'll be switching to hydraulic steering then.so, you managed ta save tha tube and bracket?
yeah, tha hyd. seems ta be tha thing now days................ i hated it when it first started circulating on tha hot rods.. jus seemed like it didn't keep ya in "touch" with what tha boat was doin'... but eventually got use to it.....Yup. He just cut the cable itself. The engine is being moved to another boat and I'll be switching to hydraulic steering then.
Thanks for the heads up, Chris. I'll check into it more before making a final decision.Hydraulic steering is real smooth. If it springs a leak, it can get dangerous.
not had experience with hydraulic much but seastar is the one to go for. It was on my 34', 40 year old or so boat, called them they got me new seals and great help to do it all. It was a twin inboard rudder set up.I went to my marine mechanic this morning and we talked about steering for the XR6 on my boat. The bottom line is that he recommended going hydraulic since I have to replace everything anyway.
He suggested Seastar, which is very expensive. I'm researching Uflex also, which seems to be about half the price of Seastar from what I've learned so far.
I'll stay away from Vevor unless I'm told otherwise. It's apparently a cheap Chinese knockoff. And the mechanic said that parts are not always available for the off-brand stuff.
With the XR6 on this boat, it's likely to hit 60MPH or even more. Gotta have the best that I can afford, which is definitely a limiting factor.