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V-17
So a friend of mine had this in his driveway. Transom was rotted and it has since been replaced with 2 layers of 3/4 marine plywood, some glass mat and a healthy ammount of West resin. I came across the '87 120 Johnson and gave it some new paint and stickers. Hull got painted and the sides got Rhino lining. It was a good project and it runs decent. The shaft is too long (25") so I'll either raise the engine or look for another. Anyone else have one of these boats? Any decent info on them? How low should the aft be sitting in the water (is the 120 too heavy)?
http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u...llcraft001.jpg http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u...llcraft002.jpg http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u...llcraft003.jpg http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u...llcraft004.jpg http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u...llcraft005.jpg http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u...llcraft006.jpg http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u...llcraft007.jpg http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u...llcraft008.jpg |
I'll be damned, let me get my camera, I'll be right back!
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Nice looking boat. I bet it will fly with that 120!
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Sorry about that, my father has another project boat going on and I thought it was the same hull. I'll start another thread instead of hijacking yours.
The 120 horse would create no more problems than an 85 horse, they are about the same weight. You can easily change from a 20 to a 25" with an adapter, spacer looking stationary jack plate. We'll see if we can find the thread or manufacturer. Oh, Welcome to the site!! |
Here it are!!
http://www.wellcraftv20.com/communit...ght=jack+plate |
A 115 crossflow(roughly 315 lbs for a 20" shaft) engine would cut about 70 pounds off the transom vs that 120 looper(close to 390 for a 25" shaft). For that size boat I wouldn't keep that 120 on it, they are just too heavy. The 120/140 weighs almost as much as the old style 150 V-6's, but they have just about as much torque as well to em. A 115 would be a MUCH better match to that hull. The only downside is that the earlier crossflow engines do use more fuel. I would think a 90 YAMAHA would be an ideal match to that hull personally. Lightweight and fuel efficient, and with the right prop would probably perform well. For the money though, you could probably sell that 120 and buy a 115 and come out with MORE money in your pocket as the 25" shaft V-4's are on the rare side and normally fetch a bit more money. I would also say put you a fuel tank inside the console and try and put your batteries under the front deck. This would make the boat ride generally better with that heavy engine on it.
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Listen to FERM.
There is no need to question if he is right or not! Cause he is. I'd not considered the weight difference in the 20" and 25". |
WELCOME TO THE SITE!!!!
Nice lookin little boat yall have there. |
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Thanks for the welcome.
I had thought of a jack plate but am not totally sold on the idea. I have a 70 Yamaha on my 15' Whaler and would get a 90 Yama in a heartbeat if a decent deal was to be had (ideal would be straight up swap on the 120). At the moment it will do 32 with three on board. The engine is definately too low (prop is too deep) and it sits kind of low in the back. Will keep eyes out for a smaller engine (shaft and maybe HP). I am thinking of a gas tank for under the console, that tank was just for the bay test. The Wellcraft will be used over the summer, but I also have a few other toys/projects that will be used. http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u.../Inoldshop.jpg http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u...-/sailboat.jpg that became http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u99/Rich_P-/aft.jpg http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u...pikture173.jpg http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u.../Camera021.jpg |
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