longshanks
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2006
- Messages
- 188
Howdy folks, from British Columbia
I'm the owner of a 15' heavy duty aluminum skiff that I purchased last year. It is a very beamy hull, with a 6 degree vee hull, to be used as a versatile fishing skiff for rivers and lakes. The hull has a small tunnel in the last 18" of bottom, to direct 'clean' water to the prop/jet, and to permit operation in shallow waters.
I bought the hull with a 60HP outboard jet, and I have recently purchased a merc 4-stroke 50HP prop motor for the boat, so I can swap engines and use in lakes or rivers or ocean.
I am aware that for optimal performance, prop motors' cavitation plate should be mounted flush with the bottom edge of the transom (in my case, the top of the tunnel). With the 20" prop leg, the cavitation plate of the prop motor will sit approximately 2" above the bottom of the transom/top of tunnel.
My question is, should I cut down the transom before mounting the prop motor, or is it worth trying the motor first, to see if the prop functions ok in this 'high' position? I hear that some hull/motor combinations work ok with this configuration. The hull works great with the jet, and I'd rather not cut away the transom, unless it is needed for prop use.
thanks in advance for your thoughts
cheers
I'm the owner of a 15' heavy duty aluminum skiff that I purchased last year. It is a very beamy hull, with a 6 degree vee hull, to be used as a versatile fishing skiff for rivers and lakes. The hull has a small tunnel in the last 18" of bottom, to direct 'clean' water to the prop/jet, and to permit operation in shallow waters.
I bought the hull with a 60HP outboard jet, and I have recently purchased a merc 4-stroke 50HP prop motor for the boat, so I can swap engines and use in lakes or rivers or ocean.
I am aware that for optimal performance, prop motors' cavitation plate should be mounted flush with the bottom edge of the transom (in my case, the top of the tunnel). With the 20" prop leg, the cavitation plate of the prop motor will sit approximately 2" above the bottom of the transom/top of tunnel.
My question is, should I cut down the transom before mounting the prop motor, or is it worth trying the motor first, to see if the prop functions ok in this 'high' position? I hear that some hull/motor combinations work ok with this configuration. The hull works great with the jet, and I'd rather not cut away the transom, unless it is needed for prop use.
thanks in advance for your thoughts
cheers