Texasmark
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2005
- Messages
- 14,780
Recently got back into boating with the purchase of a 2002 Crestliner 1750 and a 115 Merc 2 stroker. Purchased from a rather large dealer of such and the engine had gone through the shop with the mechanic being a seasoned professional. It was obvious he had been through the engine. Compression was 129 on 3 and 131 on the 4th (he marked it on the water jacket cover).
Prop was a Ballistic SS 22XP and wasn't ported. I doubt the prop was what was on the boat initially as my first time out it was a dog out of the hole with just me and it took forever got up on plane and you could tell the engine was straining. I forget the speed and RPMS as I was concentrating on what it would take to fix the problem. Something was drastically wrong.
In applying my experiences over the years with similar boats and having run the Ballistic 24XP on the boat pictured in my Avatar, and having experience with the Turning Point Hustler Aluminum which is ported, I installed a 19P Hustler.
Idle to bow down 30 mph plane was 3 seconds! 3 inches of pitch reduction helped but didn't do that.....the porting did....and even though the TP is a premium Alum. prop, it still had thick blades as compared to the Ballistic and other SS high performance (non racing type) props.
RPM recommendation for the engine is 4750-5250 and at best trim, no wind or waves, I was running 4850 at 38 mph. Go-fast.com prop slip calculator said my slip was 14% so my (new Farina tach) must have been right on (was at 2000 when checked against my digital shop tach). The Crestliner is over 7' wide, 12* rise at the stern, and has reverse chines which allow it to set up really dry (not a lot of hull in the water) at WOT.
I like to run at the top or slightly above the recommended engine RPM range but for now I'm going to leave it be since the engine seems to be happy where it is and ¾ to full throttle gets an immediate response. If I were to fish with others then I'd drop down to a 17P which would set me up for 5466 RPM (per Go-fast) if the other conditions remained the same....and why shouldn't they. Since TP props are less than a hundred bucks here, I might just do that....hope I don't pop my neck on the hole shot. Grin
Point to all this jibberish is that MY experience with 2 strokers is that they have no torque (to speak of)since they are 2 strokers, (bang runs out half way down the power stroke) run 1 hp/cubic inch nowadays and to get your HP to twist your prop shaft so that your prop will develop the thrust needed to push your boat out of the hole you need RPMS.....HP is [Torque (in Ft-Lbs) x RPMS/5252]. Ports help you get those RPMS fast when you need them most!
Prop was a Ballistic SS 22XP and wasn't ported. I doubt the prop was what was on the boat initially as my first time out it was a dog out of the hole with just me and it took forever got up on plane and you could tell the engine was straining. I forget the speed and RPMS as I was concentrating on what it would take to fix the problem. Something was drastically wrong.
In applying my experiences over the years with similar boats and having run the Ballistic 24XP on the boat pictured in my Avatar, and having experience with the Turning Point Hustler Aluminum which is ported, I installed a 19P Hustler.
Idle to bow down 30 mph plane was 3 seconds! 3 inches of pitch reduction helped but didn't do that.....the porting did....and even though the TP is a premium Alum. prop, it still had thick blades as compared to the Ballistic and other SS high performance (non racing type) props.
RPM recommendation for the engine is 4750-5250 and at best trim, no wind or waves, I was running 4850 at 38 mph. Go-fast.com prop slip calculator said my slip was 14% so my (new Farina tach) must have been right on (was at 2000 when checked against my digital shop tach). The Crestliner is over 7' wide, 12* rise at the stern, and has reverse chines which allow it to set up really dry (not a lot of hull in the water) at WOT.
I like to run at the top or slightly above the recommended engine RPM range but for now I'm going to leave it be since the engine seems to be happy where it is and ¾ to full throttle gets an immediate response. If I were to fish with others then I'd drop down to a 17P which would set me up for 5466 RPM (per Go-fast) if the other conditions remained the same....and why shouldn't they. Since TP props are less than a hundred bucks here, I might just do that....hope I don't pop my neck on the hole shot. Grin
Point to all this jibberish is that MY experience with 2 strokers is that they have no torque (to speak of)since they are 2 strokers, (bang runs out half way down the power stroke) run 1 hp/cubic inch nowadays and to get your HP to twist your prop shaft so that your prop will develop the thrust needed to push your boat out of the hole you need RPMS.....HP is [Torque (in Ft-Lbs) x RPMS/5252]. Ports help you get those RPMS fast when you need them most!