A unique website dedicated to fishing information from Florida's Northern Big Bend. This includes the area from the Econfina River west to the Apalachicola River
What is the way to measure an outboard motor to figure if it will work on a boat? Transom height on the boat is 18 inches from top of transom to bottom of center keel.
I allways measure from the top bolt hole to the cavitation plate and and where I'm gonna drill my top hole to the center keel The cavitation plate should be even with the keel or can be just below it
“Before you criticize someone, you should walk a mile in their shoes. That way when you criticize them, you are a mile away from them and you have their shoes.”
There is no way of knowing until you mount the motor and run the boat. The cavitation plate in line with the keel is a starting place. The cavitation plate should run right at the surface with the boat under power. It's a trial and error process.
I've got a small 14' boat I'm rigging for skinny water. It's 18" to the bottom of the center keel. Does that mean I need a 20" shaft motor?
Motors come in 15",20", and 25" shafts don't they?
You do need a 20" shaft. Sounds like a jack plate would be helpful if you're going to have to start out raising the motor 2". You might want to look at the Mini- Jack plate that Bob's sells.
TC, I've looked at a couple different rigs to raise and lower the motor. Still in the planning stages right now. Don't have a motor yet. Spending all my play money getting my place over at Keaton set up. The bottom of this boat is different than any I've owned before. It was called a "triple keel" boat. All three Keels run real pronounced all the way to the transom. There is 4 inches from bottom of keel to bottom of hull on all three keels at the transon. Maybe an early try at a tunnel hull. It's a 1984.
CS, sounds like an interesting boat. I'd like to see it when you're done. I wouldn't mind riding in it, if ya happen to have an open seat sometime. Good luck with the rigging.