scott furman
Member
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2019
- Messages
- 16
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 3
- Age
- 64
- Location
- Shinnecock
- Model
- Canyon 336
Good day everyone! I recently repowered my 2003 Grady Express 33 from a pair of DF300s to the new Suzuki 350 duoprop and the performance is great so far.
Hi!! What size props are you using on the Suzukis 350’s. I just got mine.Good day everyone! I recently repowered my 2003 Grady Express 33 from a pair of DF300s to the new Suzuki 350 duoprop and the performance is great so far. I run them around 4,300 - 4,350 RPM at about 34 MPH burning around 26 GPH (1.3 MPG). A question I have is the boatyard put the engines on near the top of the bolt pattern (high) reasoning that the duoprop would be fine because of the additional bite and the reduced drag would be advantageous. The problem is, if I trim them up, cavitation occurs, so basically you can't trim the motors up to adjust the trim of the boat. I know they need to come down, just wondering if anyone else has installed these on an Express 33. My DF300s were all the way down on the transom and gave lots of trim options. Anyone with this boat knows they can bow steer if not trimmed out properly, which this boat is doing a bit of right now. Generally, love the new engines though...
Thanks!
The symptom you mention to be accurate is blowout and not cavitation.I repowered with suzuki 300’s on my 285 sailfish and placed the cavitation plate in the same horizontal plane as the bottom of the boat. No cavitation unless trimmed way up. I used a straight edge off the hull and that is how I decided which holes.
Hello, I am doing the same repower with my 08 330, with suzuki DF350 duoprop. What prop size did you use? Thank you very much. PingGood day everyone! I recently repowered my 2003 Grady Express 33 from a pair of DF300s to the new Suzuki 350 duoprop and the performance is great so far. I run them around 4,300 - 4,350 RPM at about 34 MPH burning around 26 GPH (1.3 MPG). A question I have is the boatyard put the engines on near the top of the bolt pattern (high) reasoning that the duoprop would be fine because of the additional bite and the reduced drag would be advantageous. The problem is, if I trim them up, cavitation occurs, so basically you can't trim the motors up to adjust the trim of the boat. I know they need to come down, just wondering if anyone else has installed these on an Express 33. My DF300s were all the way down on the transom and gave lots of trim options. Anyone with this boat knows they can bow steer if not trimmed out properly, which this boat is doing a bit of right now. Generally, love the new engines though...
Thanks!
...... Once observation is that in bumpy waters, I have observed at least one of the engines cavitate briefly, then retain traction and the rpms will come back down to the throttle position. Unsure as to why this is happening. ....
Hi do you remenber the pitch of the propGood day everyone! I recently repowered my 2003 Grady Express 33 from a pair of DF300s to the new Suzuki 350 duoprop and the performance is great so far. I run them around 4,300 - 4,350 RPM at about 34 MPH burning around 26 GPH (1.3 MPG). A question I have is the boatyard put the engines on near the top of the bolt pattern (high) reasoning that the duoprop would be fine because of the additional bite and the reduced drag would be advantageous. The problem is, if I trim them up, cavitation occurs, so basically you can't trim the motors up to adjust the trim of the boat. I know they need to come down, just wondering if anyone else has installed these on an Express 33. My DF300s were all the way down on the transom and gave lots of trim options. Anyone with this boat knows they can bow steer if not trimmed out properly, which this boat is doing a bit of right now. Generally, love the new engines though...
Thanks!