wipe_out
Well-Known Member
Surely, trying to set-up your engine this way is totally dependent upon the boat being at the optimum trim at WOT which, IMHO, is pretty impossible, as you can never guarantee to have the loaded weight of persons, fuel, stores, etc, etc, in the same positions each time you use your boat. Maybe this method of setting-up an outboard is fine for an out and out racing boat, but it seems a bit OTT for a 'cruising' boat.
Have a Honda outboard, and they set-up the outboard with the anti-cavitation plate level with the bottom of the keel, which appears to be the most common method.
Aligning with the keel seems to be the "standard" setup but doesn't necessarily mean it's the "best" or even the "correct" setup for any given boat.. It seems the only way to get it right is real world testing.. An article I read last night actually made a lot on sense when it said that having the cavitation plate in line with the keel assumes the water coming out from the back is going to stay at that height but it doesn't.. The boat makes a hole in the water as it moves and at the point where the transom passes a given point the water starts to refill the hole causing it to rise..
Having the cavitation plate set to low causes drag, increased fuel consumption, more strain on the motor and apparently more strain on the transom (though I am not sure I see how since it's the prop doing the pushing unless it's to do with the leverage).. They also said having it at the correct hight can improve time to plane.. On one of the other forums a guy said of something like the last 4 boats he has bought, all aligned to the keel from the shop he needed to raise all of them to get them running right, one he had to raise by 3 holes..
To get it perfect would require a "Jackplate" but it should get close enough using the mounting holes..
So yes, maybe it's OTT or could be seen as unnecessary but then can't the same be said for the amount of time and money we all spend on boats? Why not get the outboard mounted right?