Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#4
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 4, 11:06 pm, timW wrote:
I need some advice regarding our new boat. We recently purchased a used 1995 Sea Ray Sundancer 230DA and took it out for it's first spin today. All went reasonably well, though one or two things left me a little puzzled, and I wouldn't mind some feedback from others with more experience on the matters. I grew up around boats back in my homeland of Australia, but as they were my father's boats, and generally outboards, this recent acquisition is proving something of a new experience for me. The boat came with a 2-year old 5.0 Mercruiser and manifolds that were replaced only 7 months ago, so I felt fairly confident about the purchase of a boat that was otherwise 12 years old. It has a few cosmetic issues that have to be dealt with, but overall we were happy with the purchase, especially at the price we picked it up at. We went out on Florida's St. John's river for the day this morning and overall were pleased with the performance, but a few things cropped up that had me wondering if there were problems with the boat, or what the root of them might be. Firstly, while it maneuvered fairly easily at low speed (so much so that my 9-year old son happily steered the boat along under my supervision) once at high speed it seemed like a real dog to steer, so much so that I really had to grip the steering wheel firmly with both hands to turn it in the direction I wanted the boat to go. Once or twice it certainly seemed that I was fighting the tendency of the trim tabs to want to pull the boat in a particular direction, but even though an adjustment would ease the pressure on the steering wheel I still felt it needed quite some effort to steer the boat - I don't think my wife would have been capable of doing the job. Not having any experience with a boat like this before I really have no other yardstick to measure it by, so I was left wondering if this is normal, whether there's a fault in the steering, or if the trip tab settings were making the job hard. Secondly, as far as manually setting trip tabs (we don't have an auto system) are the settings sensitive to particular speeds? I'd set them to a specific point to deal with the steering issues mentioned above, only to find that as I accelerated or decreased speed I'd have to contend yet again with a lean and/or a tendency to pull to the side again. Thirdly, when I found a few suitable areas to do it I opened up the throttle to put the boat through its paces and found all was fine. Once up on the plane I found that it could nudge up to around 40mph, and it cruised very comfortably at around 25mph and 3500 rpm. After that initial run though I started having a problem where the engine started coughing and spluttering every time I left the no-wake zones along the river and began accelerating up to cruise speeds. The boat would sustain the speed for a while, then begin coughing and spluttering until it slowed back down to 5 - 10 mph, when all would return to normal. As soon as I started trying to speed up again the coughing would return. We had a quarter of a tank left so it wasn't a case of running out of fuel, though it seemed to be acting like it. Just to be sure I threw some gas into the boat a mile or so further back down the river and after that all seemed to be well. I got it back up to speed and it didn't exhibit any of the earlier problems. Still, if I was running low on gas I wouldn't have made it all the way back to the fueling site. Could there be some crap in the fuel system that was affecting the engine when it got down to a ¼ tank? I know there's supposed to be a small portion of the fuel that is never usable, but as far far the gauge was concerned I shouldn't have been anywhere near that low. Lastly, the instrument on the panel which indicates the trim level just seemed to be stuck with the needle in the 'up' position. When I was having the problems with the steering I wondered if an adjustment to it might help, but I couldn't tell if anything was happening - I certainly noticed no difference to the handling. A friend told me that this particular instrument often fails on boats, so should I be concerned with it? Sorry for the long-winded post. Being a newbie with regard to inboards has left me with a ton of questions regarding today's outing. I just wish I knew someone locally with experience of these boats who could come out with me to check the points out for me. Thanks in advance...........Tim the slowing down bit, sounds like water in the tank. Gas with ethanol which has sat in a tank for a while will absorb water. Add a can or two of dry gas or fuel treatment and you should be fine. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ | General | |||
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ | General | |||
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ | General | |||
Dictionary of Paddling Terms :-) | Touring | |||
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ | General |