JimS123
Fleet Admiral
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2007
- Messages
- 8,333
If it did have that plate is long gone! Or very well hidden!
Then measure the boat and do the math yourself. Then, you'll know if the boat is safe and maybe even answer the bow rise question.
If it did have that plate is long gone! Or very well hidden!
The black is probably Teflon if an OMC prop. Back in 1973 they got into the SS prop market with their SST prop: Stainless Steel Teflon (coated......apparently a cheaper grade of SS, not as much nickel content and more prone to corrosion than Merc. props). Included a brass ring that forced prop wash into the exhaust cone rather than diverged it as Merc. props had been doing for years....I guess the engineers figured something had to be different. Seems they abandoned the idea after some years and flared, and dumped the teflon and the ring....Ring was easily knocked off it you fished in the logs and stumps.
I guess I too will go the too much weight in the stern route. With that deep V hull you have nothing upon which to "set" the weight. Speculating that you aren't going fast enough for any "pad" area to do you any good. Nothing for the water to push against, or not enough water pressure to force the boat out of the water and force the bow down.
On Mercury engines if you remove the tilt pin you can tuck the engine almost up against the transom. More weight is just that....more weight. I think you need to go in the other direction. Maybe you need to reinstall your "hydrofoils" and just keep the speed down below the oscillations starting point, maybe trying different trim positions....maybe your jacking up the engine like you said you did would make the hydrofoil that you took off, work now....but chine walking on that hull??????
I assume you were referring to a "whales tail" looking device that is attached to the AV plate.....looks like the paint is discolored on top of the AV plate. I don't know if "trim tabs" mounted to the transom would help or not.....that is a serious deep V at the transom. Maybe somebody has done such and can advise.
Only to add that ADDING weight is NEVER a good plan. If necessary, redistributing weight is ALWAYS a much better plan.
Apologies for not reading the whole thread but my take is that it's not making 140 HP.
Lost a cylinder?
Not getting WOT?
Someone compensated by fitting a lower pitched prop on it?
Have you done a compression test?
As it currently stands, you have no idea if your chasing a hull/setup issue or a “hack” prop job.Propellor is an omc 13x19p stainless steel propellor, its had work done to it with previous owner and cup added too it, it looks.....
As it currently stands, you have no idea if your chasing a hull/setup issue or a “hack” prop job.
The first thing I’d do is take that prop off and throw it as far as you can. Get a good “off the self”, stern lifting prop for use as a base line. Go from there.
It would be interesting to see the boat sitting in the water.
Motor and hull does not look like it has enough negative trim in.. I would suggest a set of wedges to try..
https://www.amazon.com/T-H-Degre-Po...vtargid=pla-560530979504&psc=1&language=en_US
Nice picture of a happy owner but does little to diagnose a possible performance issue.You ask and you shall recieve
I haven't got any side on views
My issue is i havent got funds to try another prop as I have just lost my job due to covid-19 and cancellation of orders, doing odd jobs right now to pay the bills
Nice picture of a happy owner but does little to diagnose a possible performance issue.
My money is on a prop issue
No apologies necessary. If you didn't read the whole thread that is the reason your answer is total nonsense.
Go back and read it all and then post the correct answer.
A few people have said that, this was going to be my next look at! Thank you for the suggestion
Did you remove the tilt pin and see how close the LU came to the transom? Much easier, faster, and no cost test.