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I'm new to boating and learning about trimming my outboard also. Have a
1981 16' tri hall with 90 horse outboard. Not happy with the hole shot to pull skiers out of the water. Has a 17 pitch prop. Was told that a stainless steel prop will have a better hot shot, with same pitch. Is that true? Steven "mike hicks" wrote in message news:CSb6b.46373$xf.10838@lakeread06... Joe Parsons wrote: More of that dang boating stuff here... As I've put a number of hours on "Her Idea" (a Four Winns 195 Sundowner with 4.3L OMC Cobra), I'm coming to realize that there's quite an art to trimming the drive (not the trim tabs, which I don't have) for conditions. I should mention that I have one of those funky rubber "wings" bolted to the outdrive. I've been coming out of the hole (lightly loaded) with the drive all the way down, then bringing it up until the RPMs increase to the max (typically from 3800 to 4200) then bringing the throttle back to 4000 for cruise. If there's much of a chop, or a lot of wakes, I've been bringing the bow back down a bit to reduce pounding. This seems to work reasonably well. Is there anything else I should be considering? Joe Parsons I used to start off with the drive all the way down and then trim up until the prop would ventilate and then trim back down a little. I recently replaced my propeller with a nice stainless steel one and it WON'T ventilate. So now I trim up until the bow gets a little "bouncy" and then trim back down a little. My stinkin' trim gage doesn't work anymore so I can't use that. It's hard to trim it right if the water's rough. |
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