Outboard motor for Shock Santana 22?

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barrys

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Oct 23, 2011
2
Shock Santana 22 EUREKA
I've got an 18 horse Evinrude longshaft from a previous boat project; is it a good fit for a Santana 22 sailboat or should I trade it in for something more appropriate? Or; what's the right motor for a 22 foot cruiser?
 
Jan 22, 2008
1,483
Hunter 37 C sloop Punta Gorda FL
Way more HP and weight than you need. I had a Venture 24 that motored well with 4hp. That said, you already have the 18. If your motor mount will hold it, nothing bad will happen.
 
Nov 6, 2006
10,068
Hunter 34 Mandeville Louisiana
6 HP is plenty. I had a 7.5 HP on my old Spirit 23, and it was fine..
Mostly sailing in Lake Pontchartrain, but also in the Mississippi Sound around the gulf islands. Ya gonna want a long shaft and a low pitched prop for "grunt" .. but noise, fuel consumption and handling will be better with a smaller engine. Nice boat.. Congrats..
 

Ted

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Jan 26, 2005
1,272
C&C 110 Bay Shore, Long Island, NY
Outboard motor for Shock Santana 22

As all the previous posts have suggested, 18 HP is too much for your boat. I would be concerned that the transom many experience stress that it wasn't designed for. The Santana 22 is a pretty light weight boat. I would swap out the 18 for something no greater than 7.5 HP. If you sail in protected waters and don't normally have to battle strong currents, steep chop and high winds on the nose, a 4 or 5 HP motor will be more than sufficient. Two cycle engines tend to be lighter than 4. Lighter weight in the ends of the boat will help performance whether sailing or motoring as the boat will pitch less. That's important when you're trying to keep the prop in the water when the chop kicks up.
 
May 24, 2004
7,164
CC 30 South Florida
Yes that would translate to likely to much weight on the stern once you get the crew in the cockpit. A boat that light would do well with a 3 or 4 HP engine. Do try to get a longshaft.
 
Sep 8, 2011
35
macgregor 22 amarillo, tx
I have a Santana 22 (1968) and have motored with a old 9.9 Evinrude. It was more than enough power.
I later went to a 5 hp four stroke Briggs and Stratton, and it did just fine. It was not a long shaft, but for lake sailing, it did all I asked of it, and sipped gas at a miniscule rate.
 
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