Update: I was able to adjust the trim and tilt, cool feature, and the bullets are ever so slightly in the water. Still though, it’s a lot less than was in with the Yamahas.
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Nice boat and she merit the awesome Suzukis.
I was wondering what they needed more than a week to replace the twins,
we swapped twin F250 with the DF300AP between 10 am and 4 pm and at 5pm she was floating again.
And that included to mount all second station controls on the tower pulling the cables thru the structures pipes.
Regarding the lower unit still being in the water:
I noticed that on a lot of GW's and it's basically not a big issue with older outboards as most of them don't have twin water inlet and/or so low positioned ones.
I had the same problem on my BW 23 Outrage after I switched to twin F150, but painted the submerged part with anti fouling.
However, the Suzukis on my Venture 34 did the same for the same reason, old hull nor designed for heavier 4 strokes.
The problem with the Suzukis is that the lower intake is under water and there will build up growth and clog it, but worst is barnacles and those hard worm shaped pests growing inside the water intake behind the plastic grille and that's not cool at all.
As a seasoned stern-heavy boat owner I have another hint if this is applicable on your boat.
Moving the batteries from below splash well inside the console on my BW 23 solved a lot of her strengths-heavy behaviors and lifted the lower unit a bit out of the water what in your case would be enough to be below the lower water intake.
You may consider to find a similar solution on your boat, either to use less engine trim/trim tabs or just to get the lower units a bit more out of the water.
This is only a problem if you leave the boat in the water for a longer period, if she lives on a trailer than forget what I wrote.
However, it could be helpful for someone else who has her slipped/moored.
Chris