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thanks bcb im sure ill come up with more questions
The entire manual is inn the drop down menus on the http://www.BassCat.com home page. The info requested is not in a manual.
I have a 2010, new April of that year. I have about 80-90 hours and I dont fish much.Britt
Its a 4 stroke. If it has been serviced regularly you can expect 2000 hours plus. Just getting broken in at 250.
While that is comparable to use for one Elite season or one high use angler. That being a 2010 could be two seasons by a seasoned tournament angler. That is not pushing the life cycle on the outboard. Look at it this way, 250 x 45 = 11,250 miles if those were hours on your car at 45 MPH.
Thanks for the reply guys , appreciate it
I dont know what the effect will be on engines, but I imagine theres been a pretty dramatic increase on low rpm hours with all the si electronics out there. Wonder if that should change maintenance requirements a little bit.
jpost you are correct about high end electronics adding to the number of hours on an engine!
I tried to find this in the FAQ as Im sure it has been asked before. What is the average number of hours put on a motor per year and about how many hours are the later model optimaxs and pro xss good for.Im looking to upgrade my boat and trying to get a perspective on what a reasonable amount of hours for the age of the boat is.Thank you.Jason Ferbrache – Edmond, OK 1995 Basscat Eyra
I think most generally say around 50 hours per year, though not sure where that ever came from. More important is how the engine was cared for during those hours. Was mainenance completed on schedule, do you have diagnostic printout of how the hours were ran on the engine, was it broken in properly, alot of little things make a difference in the mind of a prospective buyer. Records of maintenance performed, as well as a detailed printout of the engine hours help with buyers making a choice. Though 50 hours per year still is about the general average for the weekend tournament angler, thoug southern boats are generally gonna have a few more hours on them then their northern counerparts. A good example is I put 67.2 hours on my puma from sep 2010 till june 2011 living in south alabama, since moving to New Jersey in july of 2011 I have only added 26.4 more hours. As for how many hours they are good for? Thats easy…. either 1 hour or 3000 hours, anything mechanical can and will break at some time, some will last 3000 hours, some will blow during their inital break in. Run them as they are designed, maintain them as the manual calls for and most will see a long life from their motor. Last edited by JSLAW on July 29th, 2012, 3:05 am, edited 1 time in total.
I got this from Phil Addison when I asked a similar question.>100 for those that fish every weekend and sometimes during the weekavg number of hours are going up due to the electronics that are now on the market. more and more hours are being chalked up due to idling. avg hours are also greater on larger lakes. hours on an engine should not be used to base the condition of the boat or engine. engines have 1000s of hours of lifetime and some would never see that if they ran the same boat same engine all their life!
Good question! JSLAW is very close. The mid level angler puts on about 55 to 105 hours annually now. The lower use, local and small reservoir angler will go from 75 down to 40, with casual anglers using even less. The upper levels of a touring pro will use from 275 down to 125 we find. we haved seen over 2000 hours in engines, though we get edgy over 1500 hours ourselves. We have seen engines with over 2400 hours and no major ordeals, and over 800 something usually has gone awry. Boat speeds seem to average around 45-50. Tournament level BCB product has had hour meter capability in most engines since 1993 model year. We should have a better grasp on this than anyone. We just saw (2012) a late 1996 model year MH area angler rig, one owner with 362 hours on the engine. We know this angler well, he fishes a lot and once did that hard, just less running since 2000.Fifteen years ago, before CY 2000 these numbers were:Causal – 55 upLocal – 85 upRegional – 125 upNational – 165 upToday:Casual – 20 upLocal – 40 upRegional -55 upNational – 125 upObviously the price of fuel impacted this even with more efficient engines.
Thanks to all for the info this his very helpful! Im looking for a Cougar or a Puma.Jason Ferbrache – Edmond, OK 1995 Basscat Eyra
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