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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Mar 2008
Posts: 160
Default Question about trim tabs

On Mar 31, 3:16*pm, Tim wrote:
On Mar 31, 11:56*am, jamesgangnc wrote:





On Mar 30, 10:05*pm, Wayne.B wrote:


On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 19:42:20 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:
Each one. *As the Bennett site suggests, the width or span is more important
than
how far out they come out from the transom (chord).


Bennett is a great outfit to do business with also. *They stand behind
their products and are easy to reach on the phone for advice.


I have the hydralic ones and when I needed to repair my hydralic pump
bennett wouldn't sell me parts. *They wanted me to buy a new pump. *I
ended up fixing it without them. *I might try the electric ones if I
had to do it again but they may have their own flaws. *I have had the
bennett hydralic tabs for about 10 years and the one time I had to fix
the pump was not really their fault, it got water in it.


Can the pump be mounted up high or up towards the front to keep it
from water logging?- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Yes, you can pretty much mount the pump anywhere as long as it's
upright. They give you plenty of line as well. Installation was
straight forward. Just make 1000% certain you have picked the right
location before you start drilling thru your transom. Cause with the
bennett hydralic tabs the lines go into the top of the trim tab
cylinders from inside the transom. Take a close look at the cylinders
and figure out where they will go on your transom to make sure that
you can reach the tops of them from inside. Bennett has all the
measurements on their site. Back when I got them they also had 2
different length cylinders. I was able to use the shorter cylinders.
It is a single line system, not dual like the outdrive. The tabs are
lowered by pumping fluid out to them. They are raised by reversing
the pump and "sucking" the fluid out. You can not raise and lower at
the same time but you can only raise or lower one tab if you want.

I left our runabout in the water over night and I did not have a float
switch bilge pump. We had a really heavy rain and I ended up with a
lot of water in the rear. Was a real mess as I had water in the
engine oil and water in the outdrive hydralics as well. Took all day
to get it right. The outdrive pump motor sticks straight up from the
resevoir so the motor part of it was not submerged. The bennett pump
is a smaller pump that is horizontal on top of a little resevoir. So
the electrical motor in it got submerged. I didn't really know it had
a problem till a month or so later when it stopped working reliably
and I took it apart to find a lot of corrosion in the motor. So it
was not bennetts fault by any means. I should have disassembled the
bennett pump right away.
 
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