have a mac 2-22 need to know best shaft size, 20in or 25in for out board. looks like 20 would work but if heeled over might come out of water any insite?
I have the same problem if its just me or if its only me and one other. When the whole fam is there, I have enough weight in the aft area. I'm thinking of moving my battery to the laz for different reasons but that may help some.I second the longer shaft. Mine will actuall come out in chop and if I am working the jib at the bow while idleing.
Most people are actually moving weight forward on our boats. Is there any chance that your outboard is actually a short shaft (16 inch)?.... I'm thinking of moving my battery to the laz for different reasons but that may help some......
..........I still need to make a locking bar to hold the motor straight. ....
Curious about this. You will run something like a Honda genset to power the battery charger to power the trolling motor?thank you for everybody taking time to reply , I was going to get a 9.9 with 20inch shaft cost would have been 1900$ but took read the posts and decided 20 in would not be enough. price on 25in was 2200$ so i decided to get a trolling motor with 40 in shaft . my last boat was a coronado that was 2500# a 40 pound trust moved it at 4-5 n this 2-22 mac weighs 1800# i am running a hybrid with 120 amp battery charger run by 1k genset to feed batteries. house battery will be isolated to prevent noise.
Sounds like you may be a candidate for one of those new light weight propane outboards.walt said:My data point on the electric motor.. I have a 15 foot dingy that I use a 30 pound thrust trolling motor on. My reason is probably a little different than yours, I like it because it only puts 13 pounds on the transom and the battery weight is used as ballast being just slightly in front of the mast and low in the hull.
30 pound thrust is supposed to use slightly less than 1/2 hp in electricity, don’t know what power gets delivered to the prop. I can get this boat up to about 3.5 mph with the trolling motor, maybe get about a 5 mile range without stressing the battery much.
This trolling motor has got me home a bunch of times in some fairly good wind but last fall I found its limits. This day a wildly fast October front came through and I got knocked over - would have probably turtled the boat except for the mast float at the top. I got the sails down, had the centerboard down and with the electric motor, just could not get back to where I had left the truck. This was some fairly big wind, you can see in the picture. I had to leave the boat on the opposite shore and hitch hike back to my truck. Came and got the boat the next morning - of course the temps were below freezing.
I still almost exclusively use this electric motor since I have that boat to sail but it does have its limits.. I’m thinking of buying a 2.5 hp 30 pound gas outboard for it for times when I might want to motor some distance, use the electric motor when I want to sail fast.
FYI, for you’re boat, I would vote for something like the 6 hp single cylinder. It’s plenty for the boat and a lot less weight than the 9 to 10 hp. I have an extra long shaft on the 26S that I raised by 2.5 inches so that it would full rotate and the only time I really need that extra depth is for motor sailing on one tack where the outboard is on the high side. This is all lake sailing but that boat and I have seen some fairly wild conditions.
Hopefully you won't be running the motor when you are heeled over.have a mac 2-22 need to know best shaft size, 20in or 25in for out board. looks like 20 would work but if heeled over might come out of water any insite?
I used to have an 8 hp 20inch, I started the engine and went forward to pull up the anchor. I had not noticed that that the outboard was running dry when I was pulling the anchor and I burnt up the impeller. I replaced the engine with a 9.9hp 25inch shaft,,I have had no more problems ever since. I can walk to the bow with the engine running and the shaft will remain in the water. I vote for longer outboard shaft, I too have a 222.