ScottinAZ
Master Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2009
- Messages
- 831
Ok, this is going to be a bit preachy, and a bit of a rant... USE FACTORY PARTS folks.... I just got done replacing a bunch of cheap Chinesium parts on my boat. These parts have LESS THAN 15 HOURS run time on them. Lower shift cable especially. When old timers say that the Mercruiser part is the only way to go, THEY MEAN IT. The cheap one was a PITA from the get go. Could never get it adjusted "perfectly" always just "good enough" for both forward and reverse. That was up until the upper ferrule popped off the cable leaving me on the lake with no forward gear. cheaply made and poor QA cost me more hours in troubleshooting and dinking around with it than the difference in cost.
I just got done putting in a Quicksilver OEM cable. Adjustment was a breeze. Set it to the 6", and bingo, forward and reverse gears..... total time adjusting it was under 10 minutes. another problem that was "solved" was my helm control jamming when trying to shift into forward.... this now works smoothly the way it should have from the get go.
For the bellows.... lets just say that they start to disintegrate almost immediately. If the wrong one goes, you will have a VERY bad day.... Boats arent like cars, in that you can pull over and wait for a tow truck when the cheap part fails. On a boat, you can sink, and incur massive costs to recover or even be responsible for the cleanup of any spilled fluids. None of which is cheap or easy. Factoring against these costs, OEM is cheap insurance. (not that OEM cant fail, but the QC is usually higher)
I just got done putting in a Quicksilver OEM cable. Adjustment was a breeze. Set it to the 6", and bingo, forward and reverse gears..... total time adjusting it was under 10 minutes. another problem that was "solved" was my helm control jamming when trying to shift into forward.... this now works smoothly the way it should have from the get go.
For the bellows.... lets just say that they start to disintegrate almost immediately. If the wrong one goes, you will have a VERY bad day.... Boats arent like cars, in that you can pull over and wait for a tow truck when the cheap part fails. On a boat, you can sink, and incur massive costs to recover or even be responsible for the cleanup of any spilled fluids. None of which is cheap or easy. Factoring against these costs, OEM is cheap insurance. (not that OEM cant fail, but the QC is usually higher)