Hey Johnson, what's so special about those 35s?
RichardKCMo.
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Hey Johnson, what's so special about those 35s?
RichardKCMo.
Not much... an easy motor to keep, lots of parts available, alot of tork, they last a long time and perform well. Could be said about alot of motors, maybe I like em is the best answer. My runnabouts on the heavy side and the tork works well there. My hydro is about C weight and that motor seems to work well at 68 to 7000 Rs [its meant to run 5500]
The old 35's....Dad made one with dual carbs and opened the ports, ALOT. He added reed blocks that dropped into a manifold, and got rid of the old OMC flower pedal style reeds because they were too restrictive...Then, he took a C quicksilver gearbox off a puked Merc that came in on trade, cut down a tower, and ran it on an old Speedliner or Sid service runabout, I fogtot which, but it had the rear kneel pad with an open mid section....
It routinely turned 7K, then after he started tweeking rods (had a few cast and forged at a local foundry), he started turning up RPM. I remember that motor twisting 8-8500 and then his next challenge was having props cast, because he could not get a big enough pitch for what he was looking to do.
Excellent engine virtually unkillable, and, one that every family boat from mid fifties to 60's had clamped on the back.
Then came the 40's off the same platform...Different story all together. Thinner rods, at least initially for a few of the early years, and a much rougher idle....I called them the pukamatics....
ur talking about good old omc johnson evinrude right??? i have a old 35 viking that im trying to track down a lower for that turns out great rpm more than it says
ps skoontz you would have a pic of that 35 ur dad made sounds friggen awsome :D
that there are all these cool memories of the West Side Boathouse and I only have few pictures. I wanted the ones of the Rockholt/4-60 and that old dual carb OMC. If I had 3 engines, I could very easily make another one. I watched him do it very closely, and with all the people on this forum now who have foundry access, it could be done much more efficiently. This motor never made it to a hydro, but imagine a 2 cylinder C mod, about 9 full inches shorter and 43 lbs lighter than a 4 banger Merc. Then add alky into the mix.....
hmmmm sounds like a future project.....;)
You're right. I had tomodify my throttle lever a little to get more travel. I modified the deadman's throttle. The slot that the lever moves forward and back inside, I cut that slot a little longer. I think I needed about 3/4 of an inch. I also think I added a spring on the mag to increase it's return power.
This was on a 4cylinder Merc.
Back when when I ran 2cyl mercs, I manually advanced the stator after I started the motor. I just had my throttle linkage on the carb.
Sorry if I'm a little fuzzy on this, I'm on some serious pain killers right now. :(