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Boating Talk For discussion of everything related to boats and motors |
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#1
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#2
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Have you considered merc opti or merc xs and staying with 2stroke?
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#3
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I also use the boat in National Park waters out west and they are going to be prohibiting 2 strokes in the near future. They have all ready banned all 2 stroke personal water craft (wave runners, jet skis, etc.), outboards won't be far behind, so I will have to go to a 4 stroke. It's a family vacation thing and attendance is mandatory!! I'd love a new 2 stroke, but it's not in my future.
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#4
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I would think that you shouldn't really see a difference due to the fact that outboard horsepower ratings are no longer measured at the flywheel and are now measured at the prop. When we re-powered an old skiff that had a 97 yamaha 50 with a 2010 yamaha 50 4 stoke it was faster than the older engine ever was.
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#5
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If you can run a 20 inch shaft I would look in the Yamaha vmax sho. Not sure if you are looking for a new motor but the new yamahas are better than the two strokes.
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#6
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I am picking up my new boat this week and I went with a Yamaha VMax SHO on it. I'm like you, going from an old 2 stroke to a new 4 stroke. The SHO is performing with the best of the 2 strokes right now and even out performing some of them. I'm sure if you go with the SHO no matter if it is a 200 or 225, you will see a performance increase over your old motor. I would figure any newer four stroke of the same horsepower would give you a little extra performance over that older motor. The bad thing about the Champs though, is that they aren't built for speed. I just sold my 21 Bay Champ. It rode like a dream but people with 100 more horsepower than me on the same boat were only running about 8 mph faster than I was. I think the coastal champ hull is similar to the bay champ so I wouldn't expect any huge gains in speed. The newer outboard should definitely help your fuel bill though.
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#7
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just remember the weight differential ,between 2 stroke and 4 stroke.
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#8
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I'm a 2 stroke man but u will be satisfied w/ the sho. Prop setup and weight distribution is everything.
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#9
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Thanks for the input guys. I will definitely look into the new Yamaha. I would really like to put one on my boat for a test run before dropping 20 grand, but I'm sure the dealers aren't real big on that plan. Anyone out there have a 20' Champion Coastal series boat with a 200 or 225 Yamaha bolted on the back? I'll pay the fuel if you give me a test ride.
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#10
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I heard from from a regional sales rep for a boat manufacture that the sho low water intake gets clogged really easy in shallow water and over heats.
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#11
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Motors going to be great. Any way u go! Get hooked up w/ one of these prop stores and try the four blade props. Just put one on my boat. They are great on bay boats. If you were buying the mercury I would recommend u bolt on the bravo 1. New prop from merc.
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#12
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i swaped my tahatzu 90hp 2-stroke for a Yamaha 115hp 4-stroke and it performed the same as far as speed and hole shot. (hole shot actually improved)
i found the extra weight helped to conrtol the back end of the boat in high speed turns. |
#13
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I know that Champion, skeeter,ranger all redesigned their pads to allow for the additional 4 stroke weight |
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