It is unbelievably complicated to assemble a racing motor. From creating a design, identifying suppliers, sourcing parts with demanding tolerances and specifications, testing and finally to subjecting the assembled product to many weekends (and years) of use. Unfortunately, as historically significant manufacturers have moved away from outboard racing we have been fortunate to see people who love this sport step up to create solutions, take unrelenting criticism for decisions, and yet they still work on creating opportunities and solutions from every challenge. We need to continue supporting these efforts because they are literally the driving force behind our boats each race day. In the interest of transparency and recognizing the many criticisms that these manufacturers often face, I wanted to provide a positive note about our success at Moses Lake with the ASR National Championship:
Our SW15 is a bone-stock SW15 raced as-received from the factory.
We did NOT:
- Play with or change the timing;
- Tinker with the carburetor or change jets/needles;
- Have the gearfoot profiled;
- Send the head (or any other parts) out to be bored, profiled or ported.
We did:
- Read and follow the provided instructions,
- Break-in the motor;
- Talk with Ed when we had questions;
- Use good quality non-ethanol gasoline, good racing oil, and fuel filters;
- Perform regular maintenance including checking for any loose parts due to rigorous racing use;
- Change the gear oil regularly;
- Test propellers and setups to maximize the motor to our driver, boat and conditions.
With those efforts we won our ASR elimination race and both heats of the finals. And the motor has about a season and a half of racing on it... Prior to our teardown at Moses Lake I had not even had the powerhead apart.
The point of my post is our racing community must continue to support the efforts of engaged/active manufacturers for our sport. We can all talk behind race trailers and on Internet forums to dish out criticism and complaints, but it is good to take a moment and reflect on what is working too. As we look to grow the sport we will be asked where new drivers can get competitive equipment without struggling with dark tuning magic... this is one really solid example.
Thank you Ed and Ron for your continued work where Merc, OMC, Champion/American and others have folded or stepped away!!
ASR-nc.jpg
Our SW15 is a bone-stock SW15 raced as-received from the factory.
We did NOT:
- Play with or change the timing;
- Tinker with the carburetor or change jets/needles;
- Have the gearfoot profiled;
- Send the head (or any other parts) out to be bored, profiled or ported.
We did:
- Read and follow the provided instructions,
- Break-in the motor;
- Talk with Ed when we had questions;
- Use good quality non-ethanol gasoline, good racing oil, and fuel filters;
- Perform regular maintenance including checking for any loose parts due to rigorous racing use;
- Change the gear oil regularly;
- Test propellers and setups to maximize the motor to our driver, boat and conditions.
With those efforts we won our ASR elimination race and both heats of the finals. And the motor has about a season and a half of racing on it... Prior to our teardown at Moses Lake I had not even had the powerhead apart.
The point of my post is our racing community must continue to support the efforts of engaged/active manufacturers for our sport. We can all talk behind race trailers and on Internet forums to dish out criticism and complaints, but it is good to take a moment and reflect on what is working too. As we look to grow the sport we will be asked where new drivers can get competitive equipment without struggling with dark tuning magic... this is one really solid example.
Thank you Ed and Ron for your continued work where Merc, OMC, Champion/American and others have folded or stepped away!!
ASR-nc.jpg
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