Something about prying it away from cold, dead hands comes to mind.Now that it's cleaned up and fixed, what will you take for it
Wow! I've never seen one that bad, but I'm not exposed to saltwater boats either. That has to be allowing water into the foot and the bearing behind it. The good news is parts are readily available and cheap. I'm not sure you are going to see more than 2 mph out of that 12V motor, but considering that pic you might after replacing a few parts.Pulled the prop off the trolling motor to look for line, and this gasket thing is shot. @Spurhunter would this cause decreased trolling speed? I'm thinking not, but looks like I will need a replacement regardless.
No, the prior owner must have done no maintenance on the boat. Younger fellow, not really sure he even knew to.One question……. Did the previous ever wash the boat after being in saltwater
One Statement……. Let SALT AWAY be your new found friend…. And don't forget your trucks rear wheels and brakes.
Pretty cool.She is Done - New Skull Island
www.microskiff.com
If anyone is interested, here is the original thread I found by the original owner as the build was going on. The builders were insanely anal with attention to the smallest of details.
This project reminds me of my old Key West Stealth, a flats boat. I met a great friend and mentor over it. Worked with several other buddies to get it useable. The best is that it sealed the deal on my love for inshore lowcountry fishing. You sir will hopefully continue to grow a bond that will be tighter than 24 hour epoxy with your son over this boat and big reds!No, the prior owner must have done no maintenance on the boat. Younger fellow, not really sure he even knew to.
To be honest, I'm not even sure the boat has been run in 4 or 5 years. He bought it from the original owner at the end of 2013/ beginning of 2014 (the original owner had it custom built in 4/2013, used it for 6 months, then realized he couldn't really afford it and sold it to the fellow I bought it from. The registration stickers on the side of the boat expired in 2017, so he either ran it without updating the stickers or it has sat since that time.
I suspect lack of maintenance in saltwater started causing a lot of little problems that became overwhelming to get fixed, so he never got around to them, then it just sat... and sat... and sat. No hour meter on the motor, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's seen less than 50h run time. Inside the cowling is just pristine, except for all the fire ants that had set up home somewhere in there (must have flushed out a thousand the first time I ran it in the big tub) But permethrin kills the snot out of them, and I'm no longer seeing ants.
And yes, I already have salt-a-way on hand and will use it liberally after every use in the marshes before storing in between trips!
As.far as trolling motor speeds...
This boat is not much heavier than the gheenoe I have been fishing out of... which only has a 30lb thrust motor and will do 2.7mph. I was expecting to get around 3mph with this 55lb thrust motor, even though the boat is a bit heavier (est 250lb hull, 190lb motor, another 75lbs in batteries, 40lbs fuel, plus myself)
What did the spark plugs look like?Pulled apart the carbs, expecting them to be completely filthy and plugged, but surprisingly, they weren't bad at all. Some staining on parts of the float and bowl, but not nearly as bad as I would have expected.
2 of 3 main jets had a little fouling, but not bad. The jet tube were open on 2 of 3, with very reduced flow in the 3rd. But still, not really bad enough to cause the fuel starvation issues when revving up in gear i would think.
Regardless, I got all the carbs cleaned, old gaskets cleaned off, and just waiting on new jet tube and gaskets to arrive in the mail to reassemble.
My buddy is wondering if there might be a vacuum leak, so he is pulling the schematics for the carbs from that manufacturer to see if he can locate a problem.
But I fear that rebuilding the carbs is not going to solve lack of power when going up to speed. Will check compression on the cylinders next week, but I just don't see how that could be an issue as the motor starts right up, idles perfectly and quietly, and is responsive when revving up in neutral. Just can't get enough rps when under load to get the boat on plane.
(Any suggestions, I'd love to hear them!!!)
New spark plugs a couple weeks ago with complete service of motor and lower unit. Old ones weren't bad. After running it for 30 min last Thurs, top plug looked to be running lean.What did the spark plugs look like?