#91
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Re: Fed requirement for USCG max capacity plate
Ok...I have it all figured out now.I am having machineplatesonline.com make me two uscg max capacity plates.He said that it'll be identicle to the original and total cost will be $40.00.I still want to get a foil sticker if there are enough SF 18 to puchase some. I will post the replacement plate for all to see as soon as i get it.
Thanks for all the great Help...I am sure I would have been the next SeaCraft Capt. to have gotten a ticket as the CG has been checking boats in these parts lately!
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I have owned Classic 23 and 18 foot CC Mako's...They were nice but My Classic SF18 SeaCraft is where its at! Cant wait till I can get a Master Angler! |
#92
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Re: Fed requirement for USCG max capacity plate
They're in! I'll be ending them out by Monday.
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Common Sense is learning from your mistakes. Wisdom is learning from the other guy's mistakes. Fr. Frank says: Jesus liked fishing, too. He even walked on water to get to the boat! Currently without a SeaCraft (2) Pompano 12' fishing kayaks '73 Cobia 18' prototype "Casting Skiff", 70hp Mercury |
#93
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Re: Fed requirement for USCG max capacity plate
Frank, I got my sticker, thanks! Now where do I put it Does the coast guard require it be in a certain spot? My current one is located on the inside part of the splashwell, however, it is illegible and the plate is composed of two small plates riveted together so I don't think I can simple slap it on over it.
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#94
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Re: Fed requirement for USCG max capacity plate
It needs to be either near the powerplant, i.e., in the splashwell, or clearly visible from the helm station.
__________________
Common Sense is learning from your mistakes. Wisdom is learning from the other guy's mistakes. Fr. Frank says: Jesus liked fishing, too. He even walked on water to get to the boat! Currently without a SeaCraft (2) Pompano 12' fishing kayaks '73 Cobia 18' prototype "Casting Skiff", 70hp Mercury |
#95
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Quote:
The reference is here: http://files.dnr.state.mn.us/educati...atbuilders.pdf I don't have a tape handy or a boat, for that matter. I seem to recall 175hp being the limit- perhaps because of the transom stern being narrower than the beam. I can only retrieve the seafari spec page, but it lists 175hp max. Perhaps this is why? |
#96
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For most boats under 20', the transom rub rail is the widest part of the boat. But since you round everything UP to the next higher full foot integer, it often makes little difference. A hull with a 7'4" transom gets the same calculable width as one with a 7'11" beam.
Also remember, the USCG max HP figures for boats longer than 20"0" are just recommendations, not regulations. The USCG nax capacity calculations for length are figured as LOA (length over all) and INCLUDE propulsion machinery, aka outdrives, outboards, transom-mounted rudders, et cetera. Permanently affixed additions are also included. Got an anchor pulpit? It gets calculated in. Got a swim platform? Add that. Got a bracket and outboard? Add them in, too. Add in anything permanently affixed to the hull. My last Seafari was 19'8" hull, plus 11" anchor pulpit, plus 29" to tip of lower unit trimmed to neutral, for a total allowable calculable length of 23'1", which then gets rounded up to 24' for max capacity calculations. As for max HP, there were at least a couple of Seafari 20's built with 260 hp sterndrives. I think the 20" transom also played a factor in SeaCraft's max OB hp recommendations. Quote:
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Common Sense is learning from your mistakes. Wisdom is learning from the other guy's mistakes. Fr. Frank says: Jesus liked fishing, too. He even walked on water to get to the boat! Currently without a SeaCraft (2) Pompano 12' fishing kayaks '73 Cobia 18' prototype "Casting Skiff", 70hp Mercury |
#97
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The way I read that document, you round after you multiply. (Assuming I read it correctly, and that document is correct) Which, combined with a narrower transom than beam, would account for the ~50hp difference between the two calculations.
19.66 * 7.5 =147.45 or 147.0 rounded. Which then gets a 205 hp rating, because 147*2-90= 204 and rounds to 205hp. Rounding both gets 20 * 8 =160.0 Which gets a 230hp rating Rounding after, and using a 6.75 foot transom width gets: 19.66 * 6.75 = 132.705, rounds to 133.0. 133*2-90 gets 176hp, rounded to 180hp. My guess is that this is close to how it was calculated for the original capacity plates. |
#98
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Some thoughts, but no conclusions:
My original decal on my last Seafari (1972 O/B model) clearly said Max HP = 240. Not 175. And it was built at a time when the most powerful outboards you could buy were the V4 125 hp Johnnyrude or I6 115 hp Mercury. The transom cutout on my 1st Seafari, a 1973 model, was clearly made for twin outboards, as well. I rigged a new 1984 factory custom-built 20 SF which was factory placarded for 250 hp back in '84, and we rigged a Bridgeport Mercury on it, rated at 240 hp.
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Common Sense is learning from your mistakes. Wisdom is learning from the other guy's mistakes. Fr. Frank says: Jesus liked fishing, too. He even walked on water to get to the boat! Currently without a SeaCraft (2) Pompano 12' fishing kayaks '73 Cobia 18' prototype "Casting Skiff", 70hp Mercury |
#99
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I have nothing to go by- I can't read my sticker- all I have are the PDFs available here. So I could very well be wrong.
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