Re: What Horse power kicker should I get?
If the 49 Elto runs good, and is healthy, then it would work. Those old motors were really light. I assume it has a built in tank. If so, I'll tell you this story: I ran a 1954 5.5 Goodyear Seabee as my kicker all this year. I trolled with it at least once a week, it always ran well, and was more than adequate for the task. The downside was that damn built in tank. It held a gallon of fuel, so about every few hours I was refilling the thing, hangning over the transom. There was spillage, especially in rolling water. Needless to say I came across a 1957 Johnson 5.5 horse. Not much newer, but it runs good, has the seperate 6 gallon pressure tank, and has foward/neutral/reverse. <br /><br />My advice is to find a kicker that uses a seperate tank and has selectable f-n-r. Anything else ups the pain-in-the-arse factor. I also fabbed a link so the kicker steers with the main. Another note on setup, you want a bracket that will allow as much of the leg to be in the water. The deeper the better. The kicker will come right out of the water in heavy seas otherwise. <br /><br />This same bracket needs to lift the kicker high enough so it will be fully out of the water when not in use. Usually tilting the motor and having the bracket in the full up position gets it done, but you'll have to experiment with measurments and mock things up to be sure.