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gary hess November 15th 20 02:53 AM

4 stroke compared to the high thrust 4 stroke
 
can anyone tell me the difference?

Keyser Söze[_3_] November 15th 20 03:10 AM

4 stroke compared to the high thrust 4 stroke
 
On 11/14/20 9:53 PM, gary hess wrote:
can anyone tell me the difference?


The "high thrust" motors typically have larger lower units, higher gear
ratios, and different props than "standard" outboards , but I believe
the powerheads are the same in both types.

--
*Lock Trump Up!*

True North[_2_] November 15th 20 03:44 AM

4 stroke compared to the high thrust 4 stroke
 
On Saturday, 14 November 2020 at 23:10:58 UTC-4, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 11/14/20 9:53 PM, gary hess wrote:
can anyone tell me the difference?

The "high thrust" motors typically have larger lower units, higher gear
ratios, and different props than "standard" outboards , but I believe
the powerheads are the same in both types.

--
*Lock Trump Up!*



Yes, that was the case with the Mercury 60 Big Foot that came with the 16 and a half foot Legend bow rider I owned a few years ago. They claimed it had the same lower end as the 90 and had a special larger high thrust propeller. I believe it was originally popular for pontoon boats.

Alex[_23_] November 15th 20 04:06 AM

4 stroke compared to the high thrust 4 stroke
 
True North wrote:
On Saturday, 14 November 2020 at 23:10:58 UTC-4, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 11/14/20 9:53 PM, gary hess wrote:
can anyone tell me the difference?

The "high thrust" motors typically have larger lower units, higher gear
ratios, and different props than "standard" outboards , but I believe
the powerheads are the same in both types.

--
*Lock Trump Up!*


Yes, that was the case with the Mercury 60 Big Foot that came with the 16 and a half foot Legend bow rider I owned a few years ago. They claimed it had the same lower end as the 90 and had a special larger high thrust propeller. I believe it was originally popular for pontoon boats.


"They claimed"?Â* That's hilarious!Â* Only you buy boats on a salesman's
word and look what that got you.Â* The reason they are popular for
pontoon boats is that they can move a heavier load, at slow speed, more
efficiently.Â* They were never designed for the hull style, and weight,
of the POS Legend you wasted your money on.Â* They probably had a Bigfoot
laying around at the dealership and sold it to the first dip**** to walk
in.Â* That salesman probably got a nice commission for unloading that
from their inventory.

"Jorge"


True North[_2_] November 15th 20 12:38 PM

4 stroke compared to the high thrust 4 stroke
 
On Sunday, 15 November 2020 at 00:07:04 UTC-4, Alex wrote:
True North wrote:
On Saturday, 14 November 2020 at 23:10:58 UTC-4, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 11/14/20 9:53 PM, gary hess wrote:
can anyone tell me the difference?

The "high thrust" motors typically have larger lower units, higher gear
ratios, and different props than "standard" outboards , but I believe
the powerheads are the same in both types.

--
*Lock Trump Up!*


Yes, that was the case with the Mercury 60 Big Foot that came with the 16 and a half foot Legend bow rider I owned a few years ago. They claimed it had the same lower end as the 90 and had a special larger high thrust propeller. I believe it was originally popular for pontoon boats.

"They claimed"? That's hilarious! Only you buy boats on a salesman's
word and look what that got you. The reason they are popular for
pontoon boats is that they can move a heavier load, at slow speed, more
efficiently. They were never designed for the hull style, and weight,
of the POS Legend you wasted your money on. They probably had a Bigfoot
laying around at the dealership and sold it to the first dip**** to walk
in. That salesman probably got a nice commission for unloading that
from their inventory.

"Jorge"



Boy...y'all are getting more ditzy by the day.
The boat manufacturer offered the 60 Big foot as an upgrade from the base 40 hp outboard.
Y'all should keep your pie hole shut unless you know what you're blathering about.


Keyser Söze[_3_] November 15th 20 12:46 PM

4 stroke compared to the high thrust 4 stroke
 
On 11/15/20 7:38 AM, True North wrote:
On Sunday, 15 November 2020 at 00:07:04 UTC-4, Alex wrote:
True North wrote:
On Saturday, 14 November 2020 at 23:10:58 UTC-4, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 11/14/20 9:53 PM, gary hess wrote:
can anyone tell me the difference?

The "high thrust" motors typically have larger lower units, higher gear
ratios, and different props than "standard" outboards , but I believe
the powerheads are the same in both types.

--
*Lock Trump Up!*

Yes, that was the case with the Mercury 60 Big Foot that came with the 16 and a half foot Legend bow rider I owned a few years ago. They claimed it had the same lower end as the 90 and had a special larger high thrust propeller. I believe it was originally popular for pontoon boats.

"They claimed"? That's hilarious! Only you buy boats on a salesman's
word and look what that got you. The reason they are popular for
pontoon boats is that they can move a heavier load, at slow speed, more
efficiently. They were never designed for the hull style, and weight,
of the POS Legend you wasted your money on. They probably had a Bigfoot
laying around at the dealership and sold it to the first dip**** to walk
in. That salesman probably got a nice commission for unloading that
from their inventory.

"Jorge"



Boy...y'all are getting more ditzy by the day.
The boat manufacturer offered the 60 Big foot as an upgrade from the base 40 hp outboard.
Y'all should keep your pie hole shut unless you know what you're blathering about.

Interesting that some newbie asks a reasonable question here and a
couple of the reigning assholes, of which "Alex" is a ranking member,
immediately turn it into trash.

--
*Lock Trump Up!*

Justan O. November 15th 20 01:44 PM

4 stroke compared to the high thrust 4 stroke
 
On 11/14/20 9:53 PM, gary hess wrote:
can anyone tell me the difference?


Thrust

Keyser Söze[_3_] November 15th 20 01:48 PM

4 stroke compared to the high thrust 4 stroke
 
On 11/15/20 8:44 AM, Justan O. wrote:
On 11/14/20 9:53 PM, gary hess wrote:
can anyone tell me the difference?


Thrust


Ahh, yes...the very quality all the women in your life said you lacked.

--
*Lock Trump Up!*

Justan O. November 15th 20 01:54 PM

4 stroke compared to the high thrust 4 stroke
 
On 11/14/20 10:44 PM, True North wrote:
On Saturday, 14 November 2020 at 23:10:58 UTC-4, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 11/14/20 9:53 PM, gary hess wrote:
can anyone tell me the difference?

The "high thrust" motors typically have larger lower units, higher gear
ratios, and different props than "standard" outboards , but I believe
the powerheads are the same in both types.

--
*Lock Trump Up!*



Yes, that was the case with the Mercury 60 Big Foot that came with the 16 and a half foot Legend bow rider I owned a few years ago. They claimed it had the same lower end as the 90 and had a special larger high thrust propeller. I believe it was originally popular for pontoon boats.


Thats an odd combination for typical mono hull pleasure boats. Ski boats
might be the exception. Did you do a lot of water skilng pulling large
people?

Justan O. November 15th 20 01:58 PM

4 stroke compared to the high thrust 4 stroke
 
On 11/14/20 11:06 PM, Alex wrote:
True North wrote:
On Saturday, 14 November 2020 at 23:10:58 UTC-4, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 11/14/20 9:53 PM, gary hess wrote:
can anyone tell me the difference?

The "high thrust" motors typically have larger lower units, higher gear
ratios, and different props than "standard" outboards , but I believe
the powerheads are the same in both types.

--
*Lock Trump Up!*


Yes, that was the case with the Mercury 60 Big Foot that came with the 16 and a half foot Legend bow rider I owned a few years ago. They claimed it had the same lower end as the 90 and had a special larger high thrust propeller. I believe it was originally popular for pontoon boats.


"They claimed"?* That's hilarious!* Only you buy boats on a salesman's
word and look what that got you.* The reason they are popular for
pontoon boats is that they can move a heavier load, at slow speed, more
efficiently.* They were never designed for the hull style, and weight,
of the POS Legend you wasted your money on.* They probably had a Bigfoot
laying around at the dealership and sold it to the first dip**** to walk
in.* That salesman probably got a nice commission for unloading that
from their inventory.

"Jorge"


Our little Kanuckian friend never heads the good advice we gave him. The one
exception was when we shamed him out of buying a powered tongue wheel to
push his little boat around his yard.


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