SBH2OMan
Well-known member
I don't have her back from the shop yet, but the Lori-K has a new Honda BF225 pushing her around now. The old Ox66 just got to be too much of a headache to maintain and I was tired of wrenching on it instead of using the boat. Plus with Honda financing, the monthly payment will more or less be covered by the projected fuel, oil, and maintenance savings. Not to mention the peace of mind of knowing I can go 30 miles off shore and not worry about getting home because I'm getting weird random hiccups from the motor at certain RPM ranges....
As part of the project, we replaced the transom batteries with a pair of Optima Blue Top batteries (Light gray case for deep cycle, dark gray case for starting - or vice versa I can't remember). BTW, Optimas are the only AGM batteries certified by Honda for use as starting batteries.
We also removed the kicker motor to reduce listing and weight on the transom. Since the kicker is not able to push the boat up-wind or up swell anyway because of the boat's weight and sail area, it was more or less useless for getting home in an emergency. This left its purpose as solely for trolling, which I do a couple times a year, and the Honda motor will gladly do all day long (unlike a 2-stroke). Between changing the batteries and removing the kicker, I figure we have a net weight savings of about 20 lbs on the transom.
Because the new motor is 100% NMEA2000 compliant, we also decided to go with one of the new Raymarine e7 units (on order) and clean up the dash, limiting the analog gauges to just a tach and fuel gauge. The rest of the instrumentation will come from the e7 Unit.
The shop owner sea trailed it yesterday and called me. We were talking for a few minutes and I asked "so when are you going to put it in the water?"
"I'm out sea trailing it right now." he said matter of factly.
"Oh, have you started the motor yet?" I asked
"I'm running at 5,000 RPMs and going 35 mph." He replies
"Wow!" I think, remarking on how quiet it is. "So you have the cabin door closed then?" I ask
"Nope, Its wide open."
OMG, this motor is quiet... It was like talking to him in his living room!
He trailed it with a 15p prop and by my calculations was getting 4% slip at 5500 RPM which is AMAZING compared to the results I was getting with my old motor. He could not get it up to 6000 RPM, and said it felt "sluggish" with the 15p (we had a Mirage 17 on their before). So next week we are going to trial it with a 13p and an 11p (which I cannot believe would be the right prop, but apparently these Titan props are very different from the Mirage props). As long as I can cruise at 4200 to 4500 and maintain 25 to 27 mph, I'll be happy. The slip on this motor/prop is SO much less than what I was seeing on the Yamaha/Mirago combo.
Some pics of the project. One thing you'll note is the extreme angle of this bracket put on the boat by Parker. There really are two things "wrong" with these old style brackets from Stainless Marine: one, they have no floatation to speak of, and two, the mounting bracket is angled too much in towards the boat. You have to trim the motor 1/2 way up just to get it level with the bottom of the boat...
As part of the project, we replaced the transom batteries with a pair of Optima Blue Top batteries (Light gray case for deep cycle, dark gray case for starting - or vice versa I can't remember). BTW, Optimas are the only AGM batteries certified by Honda for use as starting batteries.
We also removed the kicker motor to reduce listing and weight on the transom. Since the kicker is not able to push the boat up-wind or up swell anyway because of the boat's weight and sail area, it was more or less useless for getting home in an emergency. This left its purpose as solely for trolling, which I do a couple times a year, and the Honda motor will gladly do all day long (unlike a 2-stroke). Between changing the batteries and removing the kicker, I figure we have a net weight savings of about 20 lbs on the transom.
Because the new motor is 100% NMEA2000 compliant, we also decided to go with one of the new Raymarine e7 units (on order) and clean up the dash, limiting the analog gauges to just a tach and fuel gauge. The rest of the instrumentation will come from the e7 Unit.
The shop owner sea trailed it yesterday and called me. We were talking for a few minutes and I asked "so when are you going to put it in the water?"
"I'm out sea trailing it right now." he said matter of factly.
"Oh, have you started the motor yet?" I asked
"I'm running at 5,000 RPMs and going 35 mph." He replies
"Wow!" I think, remarking on how quiet it is. "So you have the cabin door closed then?" I ask
"Nope, Its wide open."
OMG, this motor is quiet... It was like talking to him in his living room!
He trailed it with a 15p prop and by my calculations was getting 4% slip at 5500 RPM which is AMAZING compared to the results I was getting with my old motor. He could not get it up to 6000 RPM, and said it felt "sluggish" with the 15p (we had a Mirage 17 on their before). So next week we are going to trial it with a 13p and an 11p (which I cannot believe would be the right prop, but apparently these Titan props are very different from the Mirage props). As long as I can cruise at 4200 to 4500 and maintain 25 to 27 mph, I'll be happy. The slip on this motor/prop is SO much less than what I was seeing on the Yamaha/Mirago combo.
Some pics of the project. One thing you'll note is the extreme angle of this bracket put on the boat by Parker. There really are two things "wrong" with these old style brackets from Stainless Marine: one, they have no floatation to speak of, and two, the mounting bracket is angled too much in towards the boat. You have to trim the motor 1/2 way up just to get it level with the bottom of the boat...