i have an inflatable cat and even short shaft was too long. Being an open transom i couldn't raise it any higher, so i moved the floor down an inch approx by using closed cell foam between bottom transom bar and HP air floor instead. Along with an hydrofoil it made a huge difference to slower planing, less banging in chop and tracked/turned just like a car would. Since there was no more prop ventilation i didn't bother cupping prop.
if your cat has a transom that is too short for a 15 inch mid then something is incredibly wrong with boats design.. or was this boat meant to be using a setback? tell us what the boat is and ill find out why it was built that way
If your motor is sitting 1 to 11 inches too low, you should look up manual jack plates. "On the Fly" brand jack plates have a self adjustable circular crank lever for an instant height adjustment up to 11 inches while traveling on the water at top speed. Easy fix for a shaft sitting too low, especially for shallow waters less than 1 foot deep. With the right prop height adjustment, you can increase your travel speed up to 5 mph. The manual self adjustable jack plate is for outboard motors 40hp or less.
You explain it very well, you'd be amazed at how idiot strikes when you go Marine and for some reason watercraft just brings out the brains in everyone.
Hello, are you familiar with the Pelican Bass Raider boats. They are basically a tunnel hull style boat. So my question would be how to measure that style??? Do you try to measure from transom to bottom of pontoon??? Thank you. Great informative video.
Hi. I have a couple of questions if that's ok? My transom is 16 inch. Does this mean I automatically go up to 20 inch and get long shaft or is it too close to 15 that I should have short shaft? What issue does this cause if the shaft is too long?
Great info! QQ: I have boat with 20” transom and my motor is 18” shaft. So it’s 2” shorter than transom . Do you think it’s workable setup. Pls advise . Thanks
Cool Vid....Simple is smartest. Aint got all day for too much esplan'n of why this and that, when u have a motor to put on and business to attend too. *Jack plates are needed to adjust heights when your motor is too long of shaft which some made adjusting simple.
I appreciate the info on how to tell if you have the proper shaft on the right boat but I wish you would point out some negatives or explain what would happen with the wrong shaft on the wrong boat.
Thank you sir... I had the inflat boat with long shaft... it's look exactly in the video you show. Cuz my first time I didn't know much about long and short shaft... my question is, is that gonna work..??? Is that gonna run ok on water...???? I haven't take out water yet... thank you Sir.. please give me the advise ...
Hey dude, is there anyway you would put a kicker motor on your boat on the cutout transom or would you mount it to the back using a bracket? I have a similar design and I'd rather be mounted to the real transom at the cutout than Mount with bracket on the right or left. It's just a what if motor. So it can be stationary. I can steer with the big motor. Do you think it would be too close??? As long as it doesn't hit right?
Su I got a lomng shat johnson motor on an aluminum john boat gtypfr motyor kis it bezst to find a shoryrer shaft or wkiden the transom since the transom is looking like itr needs an upgrade anyway as its an old boat but it doesnt leak and upi copuld possibly ad a mpyor with more horsepower but the hJohnso is a pretty good notor though only a 15 hp and very reliable an d fixable locally as I may add a few things flooring and carpet.
How about a catamaran-type inflatable, like the Takacat? The bottom of the boat will be above water, so do you just guess the ride heigth and make sure the anti ventilation plate is a little below that? Thanks!
Thank you Sir now I understand ... Sir but when I bought old boat they fix their trasom , but if my motor deep about 3"... is that ok... or do I need to high my trasom more 3"????
Probably a silly question - I bought a extra long shaft 4 stroke 90hp outboard thinking it was Long shaft, is it possible to use a extra long shaft on a boat which has a long shaft? Just seems a shame and alot of money wasted if I can't. Any help/advice is appreciated. Nice vid btw 👌
OK, so I just bought this Mercury 5 HP four stroke short shaft and I have a 15 in transom. The anti cavitation plate sits 2 inches below the bottom of my boat. Making it a 17 inch shaft. Is that possible?
I have a 2.30m inflatable I found a very nice 9.9 hp 2 stroke engine but its long shaft I want to have it but will it be a big mistake or will be fine ?
I don't know the answer for sure, however we have seen many people use the unrecommended length and the motors can still work - though likely it won't perform optimally.
we have a 20 foot Carolina skiff and the previous owner put a 90 horse mercury optimax on it with no jackplate . Whenever we try to run it wide open it throws water up over the transom . Would a jackplate solve this problem ? The transom is 20 inches and so is the shaft .
Thank you for that explanation, but one question if I may. Let's imagine you have a boat that by design (flat hull) does NOT displace much water, in that case, does this general rule still hold true...OR, could it be that with almost no displacement of water, you might get cavitation in normal running?
I thank you so Kindly Sir for giving this information at the right length of shaft should be on a outboard motor & I've just checked the the outboard on our boat it levels up nicely from the outboard plate to the bottom of the Keel I live in New Zealand & the boat I have is a Smuggler 6.20 cabin boat with a F150HP Yamaha outboard Fourstroke Motor I got the boat in 2015 & it only had done 3/4 of an hour on the motor when I got the boat & seeing your video Sir of where the plate should right in line with the keel & it does & so I'm sure that the Yamaha F150HP four stroke outboard motor has been Mounted Correctly & must be a long shaft motor Kind Regards Peter PS I did measure the transom & did it by eye from the plate on the outboard motor & it spot on to the bottom of the keel I Thank You So Kindly For This Information Sir & Keep Up The Good Work Sir
Beside the length. I heard that some Engines (100hp+) as Singleengines should slightly be mountes to the right to minimize the Propellermovment. Is that right?
No not correct at all.. mount motor dead centre. then adjust trim tab on outboard motor skeg if need be or fit a torque tamer to the skeg. use the right prop and keep it sharp.. shifting it to the right is not the right way, your just fixing 1 problem by adding another. set the motor up right and at 50mph you can take your hand off the wheel. put motor to the right and it will never be able to do that....
FIRST LEVEL BOAT- LEVEL ENGINE- MESU BOTTOM OF BOAT, MESU- CENTER OF PERPELLER SHAFT THIS IS THE ADJUSTMENT TO USE LIKE IF 15" - AND SHAFT IS 10 YOU HAVE A DIST- OF 5" TO ADJUST THE SHAFT SHOULD BE 13" SET-RASE UP TO 12" SHAFT - THAT SHOULD BE REAL CLOSE TO THE HIGH YOU NEED TO RUN.BELIVE ME IT WORKS . THEN IF YOU WANT ADJUST IF IN 1/2"" AT A TIME UP OR DOWN
poor and wrong advice... look at the bracket on the motor, why do you think it has extra holes in the bracket ?, its too move the motor up. this motor should be using the top holes not the bottom. it needs to go up atleast 1 inch unless only ever going to run the boat at 4mph max speed.
My Orkney long liner 16 ft is 19 inch from transom to bottom of boat BUT has a 10 inch deep keel total of 29 inch so, so where should i measure to ? bottom of boat or bottom of Keel ?
Gowdaflow It is not efficient, the water sprays around the motor and the boat don't go as fast as it could be. It takes more fuel also, the power needs to be transformed longer and that will do that the engine need to work a bit more
Would a long leg on a short transom cause vibration as well I have a 12 foot aluminum with a five horse Merc long leg and it vibrates everything at 2 miles an hour and up trolling
fishing again you need a jack plate on your transom to elevate the prop if it’s too deep into the water lower than the quill. The cavitation plate should be between 0-1” from the lowest part of your transom
I'm in the process of changing my motor on my pontoon boat. Obviously there is no keel, so do I take the measurement from the top of the transom to the bottom of the pontoons?
Nor, you need to measure from top of the transom bracket for motor to the surface the bottom of the sponsons would be when on the plane ? if the sponsons ride on top at the rear when on plane then measure to them. if they stay under water 4 inches then subtract that amount.. see what the owners manual for boat says. ... you need the anti cav plate to ride on top of the water when fully on plane...
the transom is the furthest aft most part of the boat in the case of your run about or the rear end of the rigid part of the inflatable. Not just from the top of the motor mount to the skeg or aft end of the keel.
shame you do not know enough about boats to know the cav plate should never be level with the keel. it should be atleast 1 inch higher at minimum.. its very poor advice to tell people the cav plate should be level, this is very old school thinking that was incredibly wrong... when moving along at anything over about 4 mph you can look over the back and see water is creeping up the front of the outboard motor and is causing terrible drag. now if the anti - cavitation plate was higher it would act as a barrier ( exactly what it is designed to do.) and stop the upward surge of water and direct it more towards the propeller. just 2 inches up will lessen the amount of drag the gearcase gives by a huge amount. raise that motor 2 inches to get better performance , better handling and far superior economy.. .
That Info is WRONG ! Your Keel should be at the hight of the upper Waterintake! This is a common Problem that the Cavitationplate rides to deep and this gets you a bad Gasmilage! The first Boat need the Plate to go a little bit up so the Plate rides free OVER the Waterline not under the Waterline. Try it and you will see the Difference!
Freeze at 1:35. Now draw a straight line from the cavitation plate....that is about 4 inches lower than the keel. If you are going to do a how to video, at least do it properly.
Should I trust someone who DOES NOT know how to measure properly… with a “basically” “perfect fit”, where I can see the GAP???!!! And you did not bother to say: It needs to go a bit higher yadda yadda… then I might trust your video.