Hmmm some very good points here, including some I hadn't considered. Trolling at low speeds with a 2 stroke motor isn't a good thing (then again that can be corrected by opening up for a bit). When my kids are driving the boat, it usually stays under 10km/h. Not something spark plugs in a 2 stroke outboard enjoy. My current boat as a super reliable and well built carbed Johnson 115 V4, from 1983. That thing is simple and it just plain works. I have no experience with modern, fuel injected 2 strokes. And frankly, I'm terrified of the possibility of the VRO failing on me. Of course, with a fuel injected motor you can't simply bypass the VRO and feed the motor straight premix. VRO fails and it'd be the end of my boating experience, likely for a few years till I could afford to fix the thing.
On the other hand there are some sweet deals around for mid to late1990s sterndrives to be found, including a 2002 in beautiful shape for under $5000 (or USD 4,500 if one wants to be technical about economics). Now I hear that replacing the bellows isn't as a common a preposition I had thought. Not sure what risers are but glad to hear these aren't as common to be replaced. One of my concerns is, if I have to pull the motor to work on it, the alignment isn't something I can handle. Can these 20+ year old I/O motors be trusted? I mean, it all depends on how their owners have maintained them but since parts are easy to find and cheap, it has me wondering if these are the dreaded beasts I feared. Last week I was to supposed to go look at a 94 Campion sterndrive with a tower. Then figured I'm sticking to OB. Now it has me once again wondering.
I hate to pull a D. Trump and do yet another about-face, but I wonder if with the amount of boating we do (out no more than half a dozen times a year) if a sterndrive may still be an option. Winterizing sure sounds like a pain. Especially since we could get a freeze in September and then have two months of warm weather after that. With the outboard I'd still get it out. But if I went through the trouble of winterizing a sterndrive I truly don't think I'd want to do it a second time.
The feedback here seems to suggest I'd be fine with either, despite the lesser space in a sterndrive and/or an OB with borrowed design from the I/O. Now I hear that maintenance costs for a sterndrive to not be that high.
So much to consider...
On the other hand there are some sweet deals around for mid to late1990s sterndrives to be found, including a 2002 in beautiful shape for under $5000 (or USD 4,500 if one wants to be technical about economics). Now I hear that replacing the bellows isn't as a common a preposition I had thought. Not sure what risers are but glad to hear these aren't as common to be replaced. One of my concerns is, if I have to pull the motor to work on it, the alignment isn't something I can handle. Can these 20+ year old I/O motors be trusted? I mean, it all depends on how their owners have maintained them but since parts are easy to find and cheap, it has me wondering if these are the dreaded beasts I feared. Last week I was to supposed to go look at a 94 Campion sterndrive with a tower. Then figured I'm sticking to OB. Now it has me once again wondering.
I hate to pull a D. Trump and do yet another about-face, but I wonder if with the amount of boating we do (out no more than half a dozen times a year) if a sterndrive may still be an option. Winterizing sure sounds like a pain. Especially since we could get a freeze in September and then have two months of warm weather after that. With the outboard I'd still get it out. But if I went through the trouble of winterizing a sterndrive I truly don't think I'd want to do it a second time.
The feedback here seems to suggest I'd be fine with either, despite the lesser space in a sterndrive and/or an OB with borrowed design from the I/O. Now I hear that maintenance costs for a sterndrive to not be that high.
So much to consider...