Hi Gary,
I hope I didn’t come across as advising ‘the right props’ for Ed’s boat. The ‘right props’ are the ones that allow the engines to achieve the RPM’s at WOT that the engine manufacturer recommends (5000-6000 for my F150’s) when the boat is loaded the way it most commonly is. Higher end is better. High altitude lakes often require a lower pitch.
I think all the surviving outboard manufacturers make great engines. According to Suzuki, twin DF140B = 838 pounds, vs 1058 for the 175 or 200. Last I heard, the factory was approving 4-cylinder outboards to 175 HP but not 200 HP even if the same weight for the TC255.
https://www.suzukimarine.com/outboards/115-200hp/
So bottom line, twin 140s would only save 220 pounds grand total over twin 175s (or 200s if the factory approved it).
For perspective, the TC255 has a 30 gallon fresh water tank. At eight pounds per gallon, that’s 240 pounds which I can (and do) easily shed by merely turning on the sink faucet and draining it overboard. Presto! 240 pounds lost, not just 220!
I’m sure the Suzuki 140 will drive the TC255 as well or better than any of the competition. I have no idea what the price differential would be, but I did ask my tech how much it would be to repower with trade-in to twin Suzuki 175…answer $30,000 plus rigging. But he said if we keep up the premier maintenance on the F150’s, they will likely last more years than we have boating left, even if we are as extraordinarily lucky as the Austins have been in that regard.
Ed:
Make sure your fish boxes in the cockpit aren’t holding rain/splash water (it can’t drain out unless you manually turn on the fish box macerator pumps). If you never, ever put fish in them, you could disconnect the plumbing pipe at the macerator pump and let in lay in the bilge, where the automatic bilge pumps can pump out the fishbox water.
Before each trip, pull up on each aft bilge pump float arm to ensure they work and empty any excess bilge water.
Bottom Paint is 40% copper and heavy…don’t re apply just because some is flaking off, wait until the underlying barrier coat (usually white epoxy) is starting to show.
Lithium batteries are the wave of the boating future, but I’m waiting until the first ten folks who got a ten year warranty on their batteries actually collect on it.
My first three year major errors were hauling around WAY more gas than we needed and not giving nearly as much trim up as the boat needed when at cruising speeds.
Happy Birthday America!
John