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Prop, Livewell and General Update
So finally 2 weeks after the maiden voyage got the V back out there.
Seas 2-4, bay waters light chop. At no one point was I able to maintain top speed for more than seconds due to the chop and couldn't find a good flat spot in the bay this time. In any case got out of the "break in" alert that smart craft guages display and the motor wasn't being rev. limited in any way by it. Still pulled off about 5400 RPM @ about 40mph on the GPS. Gonna chat with the shop to see. I really like the "launching" power it's got and don't know if it's worth changing prop for an extra 2-3 mph? In floor livewell, well I really liked it. Only dislike is the fact that I have to put water into it manually. To keep the water fresh I added more about 5-6 times. Next time i'll take a 5 gallon bucket to make it easier. I don't think I had mentioned it on the forum yet but I put an LED in it. Will see how it works on the first night trip. On the fishing front, well those dang fish weren't there or I have to learn more on how to catch them. :head: Live bait drifting from 200-100ft. but nothing. Small 2-3' sand shark was it. Learnt a lot about fiberglass and boat repair now I gotta learn to fish:you:. Anyone seen a V with shrimping outfit? I'm gotta find out if locally it's now a requirement to use side nets or if the pull behind nets are still ok to use. Excited as shrimpin season is a coming. One cold snap may just bring them out. |
If hole shots can be described w/the word; "Launch"...and yer gettin' 40 @ 5400, I'd leave that prop alone...I like the way that sounds!!...:clap:
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"Launch!" I love it. :clap: I always liked my rpm to run to redline at WOT trimmed out all the way. Most outboards make their rated hp at redline and I hate to leave hp on the table. Are you still turning the 15p Mirage? 5300rpm seems too low.
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Yup. Still Mirage 15P.
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Good question...what IS redline on your Opti?... |
Mercury specifications call for 5250 to 5750rpm WOT. I guess anywhere in there is ok. If Joe is fishin out of Miami the throttle won't be pushed to the corner much anyway. The Mirage really has a lot of bite. I would try a different prop because I would be concerned with lugging the motor under a heavy load. (Boat full of gear, four guys, 200 lbs of dolphin and a couple wahoo) If it launches, Mercury said it is ok and more importantly Joe is happy, well jam up happy day.:beer:
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Please explain further. the 15P would cause the motor to work more when under load?
Pardon my ignorance but new to this and not sure i understand the full dynamics of prop changes. I had someone on my first post state that this prob would make the motor more efficient or work less offshore or something to that extent. |
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Do you have the opportunity to try another Mirage?...if so, try a 15 1/2 x 17P...will allow the motor to turn up a couple hundred more rpms, which you can stand and most likely give you better fuel economy...right now it's like if you took your car and had smaller diameter tires put on it, then tried to maintain normal speed on the interstate...the engine would work hard and burn more fuel... |
a 17 p would reduce wot rpms to a lower rpm than the 15 p, it would actually cause the motor to work harder than it is with the 15 by over loading the engine, lugging it, it would be like trying to run you car uphill at high speed, in overdrive, towing a boat. you would have less rpm, but it would actually be working the engine harder by not allowing it to turn enough rpm to make the needed hp. The most common cause of detonation and tuliped valves on I/O engine is overproping, it can burn pistons on OB's
are you running a Mirage, or Mirage plus? |
As far as I know it's a plain Mirage. Not Plus but will verify tomorrow.
But sounds like the 17P would make the situtation worse? Am I understaing it correctly? |
yes, I wouldn't go with the 17. The reason I asked about the Mirage is teh earlier Mirage props had more blade surface than the Mirage plus, the Mirage plus also had ventalation holes in the hub. I figured a plus would give you a few more rpms than the regular Mirage. I'm still surprised you are only spinning a 15 5300 rpm, how low is the motor on the transom? What hole is the motor mounted on?
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Spare's got TONS more experience than me and I wouldn't argue w/him...all I know is mine's a 17 and it got all the bottom end, mid-range and WOT performance there is to get outta my engine...your engine has a lower redline than mine and that may have something to do w/the difference...all I'm sayin' is, if you have the opportunity to TRY one, do it... |
I'm on a 24" set back bracket which is raised 1.5" per 12" of set back.
The motor is on the highest holes, in escence making it as low as possible without opening more holes on the bracket. |
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All props are not the same, every prop has its own characteristics. You may need to go down in pitch to get the max rpm to say 5600 or 5700. You will be turning more rpm for every given speed but that does not always translate into less mpg. Because you are putting less of a load on the motor it will turn more rpm, the motor does not have to work as hard and it will probably gain efficiency and MPH. You need to look at motor height also, Spare is right on track. You need to have someone at the tiller and while the boat is underway say 35mph go back to the transom and look at the cavitation plate as suggested by Ferm earlier. Every hole is 3/4" center to center. From the video, it looks like your too low, it has that funny spray. When you look at the lower unit while underway you will see why the water is spraying. If the cavitation plate is visable above the rushing water it is high enough. If it is in the rushing water you would benefit by raising the motor one hole. If the cavitation plate is below the rushing water you may want to raise it two or three holes. It is trial and error. One more thing to try. Next time you are out with the 15p mirage, go WOT and start trimming the motor up. Keep trimming the motor a little at a time until you feel your speed drop off, look at your rpm. Then trim the motor back down just one or two stabs at the trim switch. Look back at the attitude of your motor, that is typically the max trim and often the most rpm and MPH. That is all the motor will do with the 15p Mirage. |
Sweet! Very informative.
I will do the cavitation plate check this weekend if I can get her out there. I somehow forgot to check that last time. Then based on that if it's too low will proceed to change height. If it's just right then may try the 15P quicksilver. Question: Is a side effect of the motor being too low that the steering is a bit hard in one direction when wot and trimmed? I remember my 18' that when I trimmed it at wot stearing was at a smooth as silk point. Now I understand the concern with loading her up and possibility of RPM's being a bit low. |
What's the word?
Yes, motor too low could increase steering torque. Prop torque forces them to steer right. There is a tab located on the antivent/cavitation plate. If your has one you can loosten the bolt and move the trailing edge of the fin to starbd. My opti has a torque tab without the fin but I am running hydraulic steering and steering torque is not that noticable. Just make sure the prop will clear.
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