Piece715
Senior Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2009
- Messages
- 757
Ok I currently just got my 4 year restoration on the water... I bought a prop long before I knew what I was doing. I feel now that I'm not getting all the performance I can and feel the RPMs @ WOT are a little low. Really not looking to run into a lean problem running at the low end soooo here is all the information I have to the best of my knowledge. Please ask if ya have any questions! Thanks in advance for the help!
Oh and pic of the restoration on the water cuz im a proud poppy

1) Performance issue you are trying to correct. - None per-say but feel my WOT RPMs are a little low
2) Current prop manufacturer, model, aluminum or stainless as a minimum. - Current is SS.. Pics attached with info...
model SRG3R15P
Now the prop that was on the boat when I received it was an aluminum 3 blade 12.25" x 15 pitch; It is beat to heck and the rubber is shot; I believe the original motor manual recommended aluminum 11.75" x 17.
Took a hot minute to get it off the prop shaft which had to be scrapped and cleaned as the SS wouldn't even slide on. That is all fixed and again pictured stainless prop is on boat.
3) Current prop diameter and pitch (required). 11.75" x 15
4) Wide open throttle RPM and speed with an average load (very helpful)
Aluminum 3 blade 12.25" x 15 at WOT ~4400-4500 no GPS speed
Power tech stainless 3 blade 11.75" x 15 at WOT ~4300 GPS topped at 29MPH (rough water but was able to get directly behind another boat's wake... at a safe distance of course)
Load was exactly the same both times out: 4 peeps at about 650-700lbs total ish; 1 cooler (2 bags ice, 30 tasty bevs); 12 gallons gas; 20lb anchor and 6ft chain; and other basics (stereo 4 speakers, amp, 10in sub, fire extinguisher), cedar deck instead of plywood, PT130 power TnT weighs 40 lbs and sets motor back 4 inches, Motor is about 1-2 inches above bottom of hull as stated in TnT directions
5) Engine/drive make, model, year, and HP - According to the original motor manual the specs are as follows: 1985, 2 cylinder, 50 hp, WOT 4500-5500, Gear ratio 0.414 (12:29);
Now I went through a prop sizing website and the info they sent back after I answered the same type of questions for them was :
Manufacturer: Evinrude
Year: 1985
Horsepower: 50.0
Cylinders: 2
Type: 2 stroke
Gear Ratio: 2.42:1
Min WOT RPM: 4500
Max WOT RPM: 5500
Spline Count: 13
6) Boat make model, year, length and weight - 1986 Sea Nymph Fish n Ski SS155; When i contacted Lowe for information on my boat this is what they sent:
Unfortunately we do not have a 1986 Sea Nymph catalog.
We received very little documentation when we bought them out.
However from the 1984 catalog, it lists a SS-155 Fish & Ski.
The capacities should be similar but are not exact, they should be used as a reference only.
Max. Persons- 825lbs or 5 people
Max. Weight- 1250lbs
Max. H.P.- 80
Hull Weight- 615lbs
Remember these are not the specs for your particular boat, however they should be fairly close.
Iboats has this info:
This outboard fish and ski is 15 feet long and weighs 700 (pounds dry). This weight does not account for passengers, fuel, or gear. The beam of this craft is 82 inches. The max horsepower for this boat on our records is 80 hp .
Ok i feel thats it... let me know if I forgot anything :facepalm:
Oh and pic of the restoration on the water cuz im a proud poppy

1) Performance issue you are trying to correct. - None per-say but feel my WOT RPMs are a little low
2) Current prop manufacturer, model, aluminum or stainless as a minimum. - Current is SS.. Pics attached with info...



Now the prop that was on the boat when I received it was an aluminum 3 blade 12.25" x 15 pitch; It is beat to heck and the rubber is shot; I believe the original motor manual recommended aluminum 11.75" x 17.
Took a hot minute to get it off the prop shaft which had to be scrapped and cleaned as the SS wouldn't even slide on. That is all fixed and again pictured stainless prop is on boat.
3) Current prop diameter and pitch (required). 11.75" x 15
4) Wide open throttle RPM and speed with an average load (very helpful)
Aluminum 3 blade 12.25" x 15 at WOT ~4400-4500 no GPS speed
Power tech stainless 3 blade 11.75" x 15 at WOT ~4300 GPS topped at 29MPH (rough water but was able to get directly behind another boat's wake... at a safe distance of course)
Load was exactly the same both times out: 4 peeps at about 650-700lbs total ish; 1 cooler (2 bags ice, 30 tasty bevs); 12 gallons gas; 20lb anchor and 6ft chain; and other basics (stereo 4 speakers, amp, 10in sub, fire extinguisher), cedar deck instead of plywood, PT130 power TnT weighs 40 lbs and sets motor back 4 inches, Motor is about 1-2 inches above bottom of hull as stated in TnT directions
5) Engine/drive make, model, year, and HP - According to the original motor manual the specs are as follows: 1985, 2 cylinder, 50 hp, WOT 4500-5500, Gear ratio 0.414 (12:29);
Now I went through a prop sizing website and the info they sent back after I answered the same type of questions for them was :
Manufacturer: Evinrude
Year: 1985
Horsepower: 50.0
Cylinders: 2
Type: 2 stroke
Gear Ratio: 2.42:1
Min WOT RPM: 4500
Max WOT RPM: 5500
Spline Count: 13
6) Boat make model, year, length and weight - 1986 Sea Nymph Fish n Ski SS155; When i contacted Lowe for information on my boat this is what they sent:
Unfortunately we do not have a 1986 Sea Nymph catalog.
We received very little documentation when we bought them out.
However from the 1984 catalog, it lists a SS-155 Fish & Ski.
The capacities should be similar but are not exact, they should be used as a reference only.
Max. Persons- 825lbs or 5 people
Max. Weight- 1250lbs
Max. H.P.- 80
Hull Weight- 615lbs
Remember these are not the specs for your particular boat, however they should be fairly close.
Iboats has this info:
This outboard fish and ski is 15 feet long and weighs 700 (pounds dry). This weight does not account for passengers, fuel, or gear. The beam of this craft is 82 inches. The max horsepower for this boat on our records is 80 hp .
Ok i feel thats it... let me know if I forgot anything :facepalm: