I have a 14' aluminum v-hull with a 25 merc on it.
The transom was rebuilt recently before I bought it (you can tell it's fairly new). The problem is that is was built to neither a short or long shaft length. It
is approx 17-18". When I first bought it I couldn't figure out why it pulled so bad and splashed water into the back. I finally realized that the anti-cavitation plate was a few inches below the hull. I raised it up and noticed a world of difference and currectly have a piece of 2x2 (deck spindle) between the bracket and the transom. It works alright, but I noticed that there is still some slop. I really don't want the motor to move at all. Any suggestions on making a nice tight fit, while giving me the "lift" I need. I could easily design something (piece of steel or aluminum with "ears" that would fit right over the transom, but who could make something like that for me?
Wasn't terrible at a state park beach. Antelope island maybe. I wouldn't recommend it as a beach destination tho. Figured I was there, I'm getting in it.
The water looked and smelled disgusting with hundreds of thousands of birds sh*tting in there. About as gross as the Salton Sea. When I duck hunted there I didn't even want to touch the water.
It's kinda gross with the algae in the summer but I got in it anyway. Wanted to see the increased bouyancy at work. You can kinda tuck yourself into a ball and you'll just float with your head above water. When dry off you look diamond encrusted with the salt.
We went to the flats too. I dipped a tire on the rental car onto it just to say I’ve been there,but it was still pretty soft from winter melt. After seeing some moron in a BMW suv get dragged out of the muck I had no intention of repeating his stupidity.
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DTro
I have a 14' aluminum v-hull with a 25 merc on it.
The transom was rebuilt recently before I bought it (you can tell it's fairly new). The problem is that is was built to neither a short or long shaft length. It
is approx 17-18". When I first bought it I couldn't figure out why it pulled so bad and splashed water into the back. I finally realized that the anti-cavitation plate was a few inches below the hull. I raised it up and noticed a world of difference and currectly have a piece of 2x2 (deck spindle) between the bracket and the transom. It works alright, but I noticed that there is still some slop. I really don't want the motor to move at all. Any suggestions on making a nice tight fit, while giving me the "lift" I need. I could easily design something (piece of steel or aluminum with "ears" that would fit right over the transom, but who could make something like that for me?
Thoughts...
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