hola
i sold my perfectly good fully renovated newport 27 for a catalina 27 and here i start all over again! I must be stupid.
Its a 1984 catalina with the transom cut out for an outboard.
the outboard is a 4 stroke Yamaha 9.9 high thrust.
My main problem is that if I go over 4 knots on my motor my outboard looks like a submarine with the water outport and the exhaust fully in the water.
1) I imagine that that is bad for my outboard?
2) Solutions? I read some people actually patching up the hole and putting a mounting bracket on either sides of the transom, not where the patch is since it is not sturdy enough. on my old boat I could just move the motor up on the bracket. Is this the only way? I can't imagine the manufacturer did not anticipate this problem, what was their original plan?
3) my outboard is so big it barely fits the hole do others have this problem, i can hardly lift the stupid thing up in the horizontal position
4) the boat has a mysterious leak from above on the port side, maybe along the seams?
All solutions are welcome.
i sold my perfectly good fully renovated newport 27 for a catalina 27 and here i start all over again! I must be stupid.
Its a 1984 catalina with the transom cut out for an outboard.
the outboard is a 4 stroke Yamaha 9.9 high thrust.
My main problem is that if I go over 4 knots on my motor my outboard looks like a submarine with the water outport and the exhaust fully in the water.
1) I imagine that that is bad for my outboard?
2) Solutions? I read some people actually patching up the hole and putting a mounting bracket on either sides of the transom, not where the patch is since it is not sturdy enough. on my old boat I could just move the motor up on the bracket. Is this the only way? I can't imagine the manufacturer did not anticipate this problem, what was their original plan?
3) my outboard is so big it barely fits the hole do others have this problem, i can hardly lift the stupid thing up in the horizontal position
4) the boat has a mysterious leak from above on the port side, maybe along the seams?
All solutions are welcome.