When they recommend mounting the transducer in between twin drives, I wonder if that is because they presume you would not have room to mount to the side (because most twins are further apart?). Maybe the 22/25 don't have room either though - I don't know. Wonder if they would still recommend the center in a case where there was room to go to the starboard side of the starboard engine.
I had a problem with my (new) transducer on Powell. I'd be going along fine (high speed, low speed, rough water, smooth...) and all of a sudden I'd get the digital reading of 2.3' and a shallow water alarm (in all kinds of depths). Sometimes the fishfinder part of the reading would stay at the real reading, and sometimes they would both be at 2.3' Eventually it would fix itself but I could not figure out any consistent reason.
Finally I figured out that it would sometimes "fix" itself if I stopped, reversed relatively hard, then went forward again. But not always.
I had mounted it in the center of the up/down adjustment slots, so tried changing those. Down was no help; up seemed to help slightly. I had also mounted it just the amount they recommend outside the prop circle, but no more (because I was advised that the trim tabs affect it even more than the prop). However, since reversing and then going forward seems to fix it sometimes, I'm thinking of trying moving it further to starboard (away from prop; toward starboard trim tab). The problem occurs just as often at hull speed as on plane, and the depth sounder works great on plane (when it does work), so it doesn't seem to be the usual "lose signal when going fast" problem. I have not yet contacted Airmar.
I removed the core from the after sump, so I could mount a shoot-through-the-hull transducer there, but I like the water temp and speed from the transom mounted one.
Sunbeam
PS: Somewhat in the spirit of the thread: I considered using Weld Mounts to mount the Starboard backing board (I have used them in many other places on the boat), but in one of those "probably a horse apiece" decisions, went another way. I wasn't sure if adhering them to the gelcoat would be strong enough (dependent on the bond of small circles of gelcoat, ultimately), and though I considered removing circles of gelcoat for the WM's, decided not to (although as I said, it was sort of a horse apiece). Anyway, I ultimately removed the transom core from a largish area (behind the gelcoat/fiberglass surface, which only has a smallish hole in it), filled with thickened epoxy, and then drilled and tapped for flat-headed bronze machine screws (that run through the Starboard block). Then I tapped the block for the transducer screws.
PPS: Interesting about not running some transducers out of the water; I had wondered about that (but I just have the P66 triducer, not any kind of CHIRP one).