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Originally Posted by Perlmudder
(Post 2891510)
Im really liking the B-Max on paper. Spoke to their west coast Rep today and he was sharing with me how much larger all the internals are. Seems like a serious piece thats really built to handle alot of extra torque which is what Im most fearful of with my new combo (not so much the HP). -Tony PS....I also like direct bolt on and no additional transmission needed etc. |
Konrad Ace will easily handle that power in that sized boat. And not just because I have a one season unit for sale at a great price!
They are warrantied for 800HP and can handle MUCH more. They house the transmission in the extension box and include integral hydraulic steering with nothing attached to the transom. Email me if you have any questions. [email protected] http://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/s...-complete.html |
Originally Posted by Maxumus
(Post 2891759)
I think thats just an XR Bravo unit isnt it?
Im really liking the B-Max on paper. Spoke to their west coast Rep today and he was sharing with me how much larger all the internals are. Seems like a serious piece thats really built to handle alot of extra torque which is what Im most fearful of with my new combo (not so much the HP). -Tony PS....I also like direct bolt on and no additional transmission needed etc. Bob |
I say Konrad is the best sterndrive for your application.
About the Arneson Drives, I think they aren't a good choice for your boat, but you could try with other surface drives like JollyDrive. |
Guys,
Thanks for all the opinions etc. Its much appreciated What are the advantages and disadvantages of having an external transmission (Konrad set-up)? I like the turn key aspect of the BMax buy I am open to other options which look like the Konrad being next on the list (the third is totally rolling the dice with a Bravo XR and judicious throttle control....LOL) -Tony |
Imco SCX?
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Originally Posted by Gladhe8er
(Post 2891550)
Konrad should do the trick.
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Tony, couple of things.
Performance boating is laden with tradeoffs and you may be overlooking a few other things. Yes, you'll need a drive, but if you dont care about speed and are looking to go 60 why put in a built BBC that makes 800? How much hook/rocker does the hull of that boat have? Why not tone it down to 5-600 its still go 60 and you can use an XR or if you need more robustsness an Imco SC or Teague platinum can easily hold that and you dont have to get all special on drive parts. All the drives the guys are talking about here are great, but do you really need this with the kind of boat you have? 800 HP with what headers? Not through stock exhaust it wont - you need to budget for this. Its easy to make 800HP at 7200RPM and a huge roller cam through auto headers through a dyno, but living with that in a boat is far from ideal. More important than the 800 HP is how will it idle, and how many inches of vacuum will it pull at 750 rpm? An automotive style high HP build may cause reversion issues. Be carefull you must deal with water in the exhaust. If the drive doesnt include it you need to budget for external steering. No way that things gonna turn at speed without it. Handling- that boats gonna walk all over the place at speed- youll need to budget some serious tabs - k planes- the big ones will likely be your friend. Let us know what you do- I'm curious to see picts Uncle Dave |
Great post Uncle Dave....
Let me break it down as best I can....I may sound like a newb and to serious performance boating I certainly am, but engines and cylinder heads are both my hobby and my profession so Im familiar with trade-offs and most of what you mention engine related. I will break down and handle all your questions....
Originally Posted by Uncle Dave
(Post 2896224)
Yes, you'll need a drive, but if you dont care about speed and are looking to go 60 why put in a built BBC that makes 800?
Originally Posted by Uncle Dave
(Post 2896224)
How much hook/rocker does the hull of that boat have?
Originally Posted by Uncle Dave
(Post 2896224)
Why not tone it down to 5-600 its still go 60 and you can use an XR or if you need more robustsness an Imco SC or Teague platinum can easily hold that and you dont have to get all special on drive parts.
Originally Posted by Uncle Dave
(Post 2896224)
All the drives the guys are talking about here are great, but do you really need this with the kind of boat you have?
Originally Posted by Uncle Dave
(Post 2896224)
800 HP with what headers?
.
Originally Posted by Uncle Dave
(Post 2896224)
Its easy to make 800HP at 7200RPM and a huge roller cam through auto headers through a dyno, but living with that in a boat is far from ideal. More important than the 800 HP is how will it idle, and how many inches of vacuum will it pull at 750 rpm?
Originally Posted by Uncle Dave
(Post 2896224)
An automotive style high HP build may cause reversion issues. Be carefull you must deal with water in the exhaust.
Originally Posted by Uncle Dave
(Post 2896224)
If the drive doesnt include it you need to budget for external steering. No way that things gonna turn at speed without it.
Originally Posted by Uncle Dave
(Post 2896224)
Handling- that boats gonna walk all over the place at speed- youll need to budget some serious tabs - k planes- the big ones will likely be your friend.
Originally Posted by Uncle Dave
(Post 2896224)
Let us know what you do- I'm curious to see picts
http://www.bateswharf.com/maxum/spor...ic_2700-se.jpg Really appreciate your post and everyone else who chimed in....Ive got a clue in some areas but could definitely use the right guidance in others....LOL One thing is for sure....it will be a pretty fun project. One more thing I would like to add.....right now with 305 OEM HP and a dual prop BIII, at 5100 RPM's my boat achieves a max speed of 37 MPH on my GPS ( 1-2 more with trimming, tail wind, and "ideal" conditions) with a 2.2 ratio outdrive and dual 20P props. How good or bad is that all things considered and what are your guys guesses on what 500 more HP, the right prop, and say 5800 RPM's might bring in terms of speed. Does my current performance data indicate how badly (or how well) the hull is designed and what I could likely expect or is it a total crap shoot what it might do with a bunch more power?? Seems to me considering the weight and hull design its not performing too badly for a heavy single engine I/O Cheers, Tony |
Agreed on cubic inches-
More is better and if big enough you can take on a big bumpstick and still have a mellow powerband. Agreed on quality of parts as the TRUE path to sustainable high horsepower- I'm a brodix/AFR fan. Hook and rocker are hull shape issues that cause porpoising and bow dive at speed. Your not exactly running a performance hull and its likely its not straight and true. when you have the engine out run a straight edge along the bottom and see how true it is. Youd be surprised at how much power the imco and teague XR versions can take and what poeple have behind them lots of guys running blown big blocks on these drives. that said the beefier units are better especially with a hull that weighs that much - but lets see how much money you have before we commit 20+K to a drive. Lightning make a SUPERB product - good choice and they know their They'll help you pick a cam. Engines- we agree. Good heads and top end combo go a looooong way. Trim Tabs Kiekhaffer K-planes (or similar) will stop your boat from chine walking at speed. You'll have a short heavy v with a lot of power and these will keep it stable. The longer the better. Keep us up to date on this project - sounds like a blast - it's my favorite formula. Boat+ money=fun UD |
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