Guys, the 6.2 (377 cu in) is a 350 stroked. Same block, same bore, same heads.... Different crank. The 350 (5.7L) has a stroke of 3.48" and the 6.2 has a stroke of 3.75"... Everything else is the same. The advantage of the longer stoke is that it makes it closer to a square engine (bore is 4" on both engines), increasing power made at the low-end....
But again, the 'secret' to making engines work nicely, in any size boat is propping. Prop right to the very top of the rev range. If you operate in oceans, or 'big water', like GoM or some of the great lakes, then you're rarely anyway near full throttle for most of the time, you can afford to go a size down on that, and you get a boat that performs brilliantly... I've said it before and I'll say it again... My boat, heavy for it's size, with a 4.3MPI, the 'right' prop is a 19". Takes the revs to exactly 4600 (recommended range is 4400-4800).. With that prop I get to 43knots.
For those of you who don't know what a 'knot' is, yes I'm looking at you
jimmbo,
And at 18 knots(whatever that is)
it's the only proper marine term to use when dealing with speed of boats/ships and aircraft.For more details, click here ->
https://www.history.com/news/why-is-a-ships-speed-measured-in-knots
But with the 19" prop it doesn't perform 'well' below 2,800rpm. I use a 17" prop, and at WOT I bang on the rev-limiter at 5100, and get just on 40knots. But since the days a year I can run at anything close to full throttle can be counted on one hand, it's moot. The benefit of the 17" prop is that it jumps out of the water on take-off, it isn't affected as much when run up and down the face of swells, and we get some 3 and 4m swells here, I have 'extra' capacity when I have a few more people onboard, or a good day's catch

... For those worried about fuel consumption, I have run fuel tests with both the 17" and the 19" props, and for the same speed through the water, the engine uses the same amount of fuel... Yes the revs are slightly higher, but that's a good thing. The engine's not loaded up as much and will produce less wear and also be easier on the drive....When I bought the boat, with the 165 in it, it had a 17" prop, and it was sluggish and cumbersome (WOT 3900). I dropped it to a 15" and it was a different boat. It felt 'lighter' and was far more responsive... Props can make or break a boat performance wise. When I first changed to the 4.3LX, the dealer, bless him :facepalm:, put a Mirage prop on... TERRIBLE, way too much bow lift, for that hull. I almost sold the boat there and then. But went back to basics and did some proper prop trials. That hull DOES NOT want a prop that produces bow lift. Some hulls do, mine doesn't.... Best props for my hull, In 3 blades, Black Max, Vengence, Laser II.... In 4 blades, Alpha One, Offshore/Vensura. And unless you are DRAMATICALLY under-powered, it's the prop that will make all the difference.
Hit me up with more questions if you need clarification on anything. I've been playing with this boat since 1986, and my parents owner one since I was 10.... I've had a 165, a 4.3LX and the current 4.3MPI in mine, my parents had a 160 in theirs. And when I was a Mariner/Mercruiser dealer I have set up dozens of boats, and advised on many many more.
Chris......