Hi all,
We have a 2000 Crest Grand Caribbean I/O (V6 Mercr. 210hp) which we purchased last winter, spent the spring chasing the upholstery shop to finish it (another LONG story), and then got it running late last summer.
We noticed that the boat runs great at lower speeds, but when approaching 20mph, would start to experience "cavitation" or prop slip at different loads/distributions/water conditions. We played with trim settings which didn't have much effect.
When we picked up the boat, there were a couple of aluminum plates which were designed to be bolted to the foot of the outdrive (they were removed from drive when we picked it up), so we reattached them to the foot and started experimenting, what we noticed was almost no prop slip or cavitation, but now much more drag on the boat, and top speed is limited to around 22mph, and engine RPM seems bogged down @ 3500 rpm (this engine should "redline" @ 4500-4800RPM WOT). My guess is the plates help isolate the prop somewhat from the turbulence from the 'toons, at the expense of added drag to the boat.
Has any of you with I/O powered 'toons noticed this, does it seem to matter what prop you are running?
I have noticed the newer 'toons, both outboards, and I/O seem to have the engines/drives further back from the end of the 'toons, is this to get the prop cleaner water?
Has anyone else played around with spacing their outboards (or I/o) further back? What would be the minimum distance from the end of the toons to help get cleaner water?
thanks,
We have a 2000 Crest Grand Caribbean I/O (V6 Mercr. 210hp) which we purchased last winter, spent the spring chasing the upholstery shop to finish it (another LONG story), and then got it running late last summer.
We noticed that the boat runs great at lower speeds, but when approaching 20mph, would start to experience "cavitation" or prop slip at different loads/distributions/water conditions. We played with trim settings which didn't have much effect.
When we picked up the boat, there were a couple of aluminum plates which were designed to be bolted to the foot of the outdrive (they were removed from drive when we picked it up), so we reattached them to the foot and started experimenting, what we noticed was almost no prop slip or cavitation, but now much more drag on the boat, and top speed is limited to around 22mph, and engine RPM seems bogged down @ 3500 rpm (this engine should "redline" @ 4500-4800RPM WOT). My guess is the plates help isolate the prop somewhat from the turbulence from the 'toons, at the expense of added drag to the boat.
Has any of you with I/O powered 'toons noticed this, does it seem to matter what prop you are running?
I have noticed the newer 'toons, both outboards, and I/O seem to have the engines/drives further back from the end of the 'toons, is this to get the prop cleaner water?
Has anyone else played around with spacing their outboards (or I/o) further back? What would be the minimum distance from the end of the toons to help get cleaner water?
thanks,