Notice:
The advice given on this site is based upon individual or quoted experience, yours may differ.
The Officers, Staff and members of this site only provide information based upon the concept that anyone utilizing this information does so at their own risk and holds harmless all contributors to this site.
I'm planning on going for a new Tohatsu 4 stroke 25' shaft engine Currently there is an omc bracket; 80 lb. capacity on the back of my C25 Standard rig. Does anyone out there have any suggestions on a new outboard bracket. The new engine weighs in at 92 lbs. The Garelick 71033 is rated at 118 lbs. and the 71056 is rated at 115 lbs.;but I don't know how many springs they each have.
The Garhaur brackets from CD apparently do the job, but I believe the Garelick brackets are inherently stronger for the heavier 4-strokes, with a main structure of two big cast aluminum box sections instead of four stainless steel tubes. I've seen and heard about cracks and distortion with the Garhauers (and I saw one that flat-out broke)--I can't imagine that with the Garelicks. But I believe Frank Hopper has had both--I'll defer to him.
BTW, if the OMC is the one with the gas strut, it's <i>rare</i>--you might be able to do well with it on e-Bay.
I bought the four spring and it works fine with my Nissan 9.8. She weighed in "wet" (with oils) at 94 lbs.. She raises with very little effort but needs a good push to lock in the bottom-most position. My logic is the springs will fatigue/relax over time and the fourth spring may be moore useful at that time. Fairwinds , Dave
Ben; I have a friend with a '79 Cat 27' that purchased the Garlick like Dave Otey above for his Nissan 9.8 (identical to the Tohatsu, except for the labels). He got the heavier duty model thinking that heavier would be better. But the springs are too strong. Like Dave states above, it is hard to push the motor down to the bottom position where it needs to be to keep the engine in the water. We have even swung a leg over the stern pulpit and pushed the engine down with a foot. In two years, the springs haven't relaxed. Go with a model closest to the engine weight.
Notice: The advice given on this site is based upon individual or quoted experience, yours may differ. The Officers, Staff and members of this site only provide information based upon the concept that anyone utilizing this information does so at their own risk and holds harmless all contributors to this site.