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You can drive the piss out of your boats but it's the same as driving a '60s muscle car fast on OEM tires and brakes- how will you stop it when you need to?Nope, that won't do for me. It's on a 21' Chris Craft, and I drive the piss out of my boats. Thanks for the heads up. It's too bad, it's a beautiful little cuddy cabin, and I imagine quite heavy.
It may be longer lasting in a 20 ft hull than a bigger one. Merc only offered the alpha with a 454 for a few years and had issues. When the bravo was released this was a moot point.
using the muscle car analogy- its like having small rear tires. if there isnt as much load hooking up may be ok. Unless someone swapped this in this has to be an 80's vintage boat so its lasted this long.
yes but better chance in a smaller boat.But the previous owner may have avoided hammering it, too.
Is it stock or hopped up? If its hopped up merc made I think a SS version or some relatively rare higher HP alphas back in the day with tougher gear set.Supposedly it's a 70 mph boat, 80 mph with a higher pitched prop.
Yeah, he seems rather optimistic about the top speed... I run an 18' Pad V Charger SK, light boat, with a 225 OMC on it, best speed I've ever gotten is 83 on GPS.If thats a stock engine it may do 60. 23 ft cuddy and an older chris craft is a fairly heavy boat.
I drove a 23 checkmate, low profile and light boat with a 454 and an alpha, back in the early 90's after servicing it.
It did 73 mph
A chriscraft 23 cuddy..... not likely
We also sold a brand, cant remember now but it was a 22 cuddy with a 454 and Bravo, that did 70
I run with a group called Fast Boats Canada, and I run one of the slower boats at 80 mph. I have a lot of experience with these guys.You can drive the piss out of your boats but it's the same as driving a '60s muscle car fast on OEM tires and brakes- how will you stop it when you need to?
It might be heavy, but it could be a very inefficient hull, too. Small boats shouldn't need a big block.