Texasmark
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2005
- Messages
- 14,795
Ok you guys in the know, I'm going to stumble through this with several inaccuracies i'm sure. My intent here is to answer the question for me as well as others that may have had the same curiousity not focus on beating me up. Grin
Somewhere back in the '70-'80 timeframe, Merc decided to come out with a new mid-range looper and made it with 3 cyl rather than the usual 4, probably because OMC had developed the technology and pulse timing on a 3 cyl was easily achieved, and you just eliminated 1/4 of your engines internal cost. Great.
In their selection of lower units for those mid-range engines, they used the smaller lower units turning 10" wheels at a sizzling 1.78 gear ratio rather than doing as OMC did back in '69 when it introduced the Triumph 55hp 3 cyl looper with a large gearbox, 13" dia prop and more like a 2.3 ratio. I know that the old '60's OMC 4 bangers produced used smaller props running at high rpms, but apparently they wised up and realized the benefits of a larger prop turning slower for the consumer market.
So the question is why the smaller lower unit?
Thanks,
Mark
Somewhere back in the '70-'80 timeframe, Merc decided to come out with a new mid-range looper and made it with 3 cyl rather than the usual 4, probably because OMC had developed the technology and pulse timing on a 3 cyl was easily achieved, and you just eliminated 1/4 of your engines internal cost. Great.
In their selection of lower units for those mid-range engines, they used the smaller lower units turning 10" wheels at a sizzling 1.78 gear ratio rather than doing as OMC did back in '69 when it introduced the Triumph 55hp 3 cyl looper with a large gearbox, 13" dia prop and more like a 2.3 ratio. I know that the old '60's OMC 4 bangers produced used smaller props running at high rpms, but apparently they wised up and realized the benefits of a larger prop turning slower for the consumer market.
So the question is why the smaller lower unit?
Thanks,
Mark
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