I saw that Wiseco made pistons that were .040" over stock for my motor. That is a little over 2 times larger than what the factory offers. What advantages or gains would I be seeing from having the cylinders bored and putting these new pistons in?
I saw that Wiseco made pistons that were .040" over stock for my motor. That is a little over 2 times larger than what the factory offers. What advantages or gains would I be seeing from having the cylinders bored and putting these new pistons in?
There will be very little or no gain from simply boring to .040" over on an outboard.
You time and money are much better spent on props and testing time - and blueprinting your boat's bottom
Since 1925, about 150 different racing outboards have been made.
Mark,
What do you mean by blueprinting the bottom of my boat?
And to add to what Sam said, depending on the engine, shaving the head may be necessary to maintain whatever performance the engine had with standard bore. Many people assume that the slight increase in displacement means more power. Until you think about cylinder volume and compression.
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So...if the head was shaved to maintain the compression would the increase in displacement give me anymore power? I'm interested even if it's only .5 mph.
overbore increases compression and crankcase compression.
If you had tight comp before it will be way higher with a 040
But a better prop is probably more bang for ya buck as Sam Says
Getting the bottom straight and flat in the appropriate areas. That means removing hooks and rockers and squaring the edges where water leaves the planning surfaces like at the rear of the bottom at the transom and the rear of the sponsons. If these edges are not sharp they promote water creep up the sides via surface tension and it adds drag. On fiberglass hulls there are usually rounded edges at the transom and at the lifting strakes that needs to be squared off.
There are also possibilities with the surface finish of the planning surface, glossy, rough, satin, slick paints, dimpled, etc.
Over boring is used to bring cylinders back into round condition. Should never go more than what it takes to get them round.
I appreciate the help guys...I'll check that off my list of possible things to do.
I'm running this motor on a 15 foot aluminum duck boat that gets beat around pretty good. Working on the bottom is really not an option. All the work would disappear after the first log jump.
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