I've been looking at 28' Sailfish and they are mostly powered by twin 225 hp. Now I'm looking at 30 Marlins and I see that many are powered with the same twin 225 hp engines. Are twin 225's enough to push the larger hull and perform properly?
If you do go Sailfish the 225's are plenty, as long as the corrosion piece is ironed out. Sea Trial in the snottiest weather you and the owner are comfortable with, that'll tell you what you need to know about that combo working for you.I've been looking at 28' Sailfish and they are mostly powered by twin 225 hp. Now I'm looking at 30 Marlins and I see that many are powered with the same twin 225 hp engines. Are twin 225's enough to push the larger hull and perform properly?
Pat:For comparison sakes I have 250’s on our Marlin. It is adequate in that between 4300 and 4500 rpm with full load it runs between 24-26+ knots. which most folks are happy to do while running in the ocean. Performance specs with 300 Yamaha’s state lower rpms achieving a little more speed and a little better fuel economy then the 1.1 mpg I get at the above. 350’s would certainly give it some ballz but I don’t know where the fuel economy numbers would fall. I’d imagine a pair of duo props on the Zuke 350’s or 300’s would give it a dose of adrenaline
Pure speculation here, but I have a hard time believing that he didn't strengthen the transom after shelling out what those XTO's cost. I think there would've been too many people shout structural warnings for him to ignore.There's a Marlin with a pair of 425 XTO's strapped on the back for sale in my general area. I'd be curious to understand the reasoning behind that one, seems like a ton of weight to me.
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