pvanv
Admiral
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2008
- Messages
- 6,555
I have an 8,000-pound sailboat that uses a small outboard for aux power, and I need to replace the motor. This is a long shaft, remote control, electric start setup, in a lazarette well.
Originally, this was an anemic 9.5hp 2-stroke. Everyone has replaced them with bigger motors. We now have an old Evinrude 15hp (similar to a 9.9), which is adequate. Definitely not too big for the boat.
I would like to buy a 4-stroke Tohatsu/Nissan/Mercury. The 4-stroke 15 is a lot heavier, which is an issue, getting the motor in and out of the well. Also, the 4-strokes have a much larger cowl -- just look huge compared to the old 2- strokes.
Some dealers have told me that the 4-strokes have much better low end power than the old 2-strokes, and so the 9.8 has such good low end thrust that it would be fine. Other dealers say I need one hp per 500 pounds of sailboat, so 15 is the way to go. But I'm not convinced.
Will a 9.8 actually push my 8,000 pound boat OK?
Since price is about the same for the 9.8 and 15, what do you think? The new 15 is 20 cubic inches, while the 9.8 is 12. The old 15 was 15 cubic inches.
Originally, this was an anemic 9.5hp 2-stroke. Everyone has replaced them with bigger motors. We now have an old Evinrude 15hp (similar to a 9.9), which is adequate. Definitely not too big for the boat.
I would like to buy a 4-stroke Tohatsu/Nissan/Mercury. The 4-stroke 15 is a lot heavier, which is an issue, getting the motor in and out of the well. Also, the 4-strokes have a much larger cowl -- just look huge compared to the old 2- strokes.
Some dealers have told me that the 4-strokes have much better low end power than the old 2-strokes, and so the 9.8 has such good low end thrust that it would be fine. Other dealers say I need one hp per 500 pounds of sailboat, so 15 is the way to go. But I'm not convinced.
Will a 9.8 actually push my 8,000 pound boat OK?
Since price is about the same for the 9.8 and 15, what do you think? The new 15 is 20 cubic inches, while the 9.8 is 12. The old 15 was 15 cubic inches.