Matt Gurnsey":3vu9b0ss said:
Couple of thoughts-
While 15 is overkill, and 8 is plenty, you might consider Suzuki's new fuel injected 15. At around 105 pounds it is very light weight for a 15, and fuel injection is a no brainer in today's E10 world.
A note about current: Hull speed is the theoretical speed a boat can travel through the water at displacement speeds. The maximum speed is limited by hull shape and design and other factors. The rough number as I recall is square root of the waterline times 1.35. On a 22 Cruiser figure a waterline of 20', whose square root is 4.47, times 1.35 = 6.03.
So the maximum hull speed through the water is six knots. Now, if you are traveling against a 6 knot current, your effective speed over ground will be zero. If you're traveling against a 7 knot current you'll be going backwards, and it won't matter if you have an 8, 9.9 or 15 horse motor on the back.
As Mr Scott says, "you canna change the laws o' physics". Hull speed is speed through the water. At displacment speed of 6 knots if you are going with a 6 knot current you'll be closing in on 12 knots speed over ground. Apply more power (15 horse) and above hull speed something has to give- usually prop slip and cavitation. You may burn more fuel, but speed increase will be (almost) non existent.
So bottom line, an 8 with a high thrust style prop would be a very nice kicker on a 22 C-Dory, and we've seen a number of 6 horse motors because of the 30 pounds of weight savings over an 8 / 9.9.
Hope this helps.
Matt,
A fuel injected 15 HP that weighs ony 105 pounds? -- that is phenomenal! If I were buying a new boat today, that is something I would seriously consider.
With respect to not exceeding hull speed bucking current -- while technically you are right, I think you forgot that about semi-displacement speeds. If a boat is powered by only sufficient horsepower to bring one's boat up to hull speed, then you are correct; one can't exceed displacement speeds while in a displacement mode. However, if you have more horsepower then what is needed, you'll go into a semi-displacement mode, and should be able to exceed hull speed by a certain degree. It will be inefficient to be sure, and honestly, I would not know how to quantify this, for example, it could only make a one or two MPH difference at a given level of HP. That is why I stated earlier that if a person needs an auxilliary who operates in heavy currents, one would not want to have any less than what one needs to bring one's boat up to hull speed. In some cases, a little extra horsepower would help.
Rich