PartyBarge
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 328
- Reaction score
- 311
Greetings, first post. We are the new owners of a 2004 Bennington 2080RL with an F90 Yamaha. Surprised to realize this pontoon was built less than 10 miles north of where I was born and raised.
This unit is in nearly new condition, the efforts of the previous owner show well. The excellent build quality shows too. I only found one loose bolt under the deck, also the helm area light was never connected. I reattached the nitrogen strut for the gas tank cover with larger screws as the originals had pulled out (at least twice).The structure is much tighter and stronger than our previous 1993 JC SunToon 20 with a Johnson 70hp 2-cycle.
That said, it appears the previous owner attempted to address some issues (unsuccessfully, in my opinion). For our test drive, the motor was mounted in the full down position (motor bracket sitting on the transom, although it appeared the motor had been one hole higher at some time) and had a Doel Fin. The prop was a 13 5/8 x 13p! As you might imagine, the RPM went right to the rev limit and the top speed was only 20.5 mph maximum for a light load on the Garmin 535s GPS. The bow would ride very high at any and all trim settings. Scored some points when I told my wife that she just wasn't heavy enough to hold the front down...
After she decided we should upgrade, I set about correcting what I considered a mis-rigged boat. First, we junked the whale tail. Next the dealer let me try a couple props, a 13 3/4 x 15p was, oddly, way too much as RPM did not exceed 4900. A 13 5/8 x 14p produced, an expected, 5700 RPM and topend was unchanged. So, I went with that for now. Had no idea why the 15p dropped the RPM so much as it appeared to be a generic aluminum prop just like the others...but I think I know why now.
Changed the spark plugs to Autolite double platinums just to be sure (the old NGK's looked just fine). Next, I raised the motor from full down to full up (that's a change of 2 1/4") on the existing mount bolts. We now get 23+ GPS @ ~5900-6200 RPM (the tach is a little flaky...will exercise the selector switch/connections soon).There is no sign of the prop unhooking. Even yet the only time trimming up will increase speed is above 4500 RPM. It does seem that this model pontoon would be happier with about 100 pounds less hanging on the transom...as in a 90hp 2-cycle vs the 90 4-cycle.
Anyway, if I can drum up the time/ambition, I'll drill new engine mounting holes. The most available is another 1 1/2" up. so that is the plan to see what happens. Also, maybe the dealer will let me try a different 15p prop (although the same one may work when the engine geometry is optimized)...Or, does anyone have the perfect prop suggestion for this pontoon/motor combination? A SpiteFire of 13 or 15 pitch sounds appealing at the moment.... This combo should have another couple MPH hiding somewhere if the geometry and prop are right....even with the 23" logs. Cheers and thanks for replies.
This unit is in nearly new condition, the efforts of the previous owner show well. The excellent build quality shows too. I only found one loose bolt under the deck, also the helm area light was never connected. I reattached the nitrogen strut for the gas tank cover with larger screws as the originals had pulled out (at least twice).The structure is much tighter and stronger than our previous 1993 JC SunToon 20 with a Johnson 70hp 2-cycle.
That said, it appears the previous owner attempted to address some issues (unsuccessfully, in my opinion). For our test drive, the motor was mounted in the full down position (motor bracket sitting on the transom, although it appeared the motor had been one hole higher at some time) and had a Doel Fin. The prop was a 13 5/8 x 13p! As you might imagine, the RPM went right to the rev limit and the top speed was only 20.5 mph maximum for a light load on the Garmin 535s GPS. The bow would ride very high at any and all trim settings. Scored some points when I told my wife that she just wasn't heavy enough to hold the front down...
After she decided we should upgrade, I set about correcting what I considered a mis-rigged boat. First, we junked the whale tail. Next the dealer let me try a couple props, a 13 3/4 x 15p was, oddly, way too much as RPM did not exceed 4900. A 13 5/8 x 14p produced, an expected, 5700 RPM and topend was unchanged. So, I went with that for now. Had no idea why the 15p dropped the RPM so much as it appeared to be a generic aluminum prop just like the others...but I think I know why now.
Changed the spark plugs to Autolite double platinums just to be sure (the old NGK's looked just fine). Next, I raised the motor from full down to full up (that's a change of 2 1/4") on the existing mount bolts. We now get 23+ GPS @ ~5900-6200 RPM (the tach is a little flaky...will exercise the selector switch/connections soon).There is no sign of the prop unhooking. Even yet the only time trimming up will increase speed is above 4500 RPM. It does seem that this model pontoon would be happier with about 100 pounds less hanging on the transom...as in a 90hp 2-cycle vs the 90 4-cycle.
Anyway, if I can drum up the time/ambition, I'll drill new engine mounting holes. The most available is another 1 1/2" up. so that is the plan to see what happens. Also, maybe the dealer will let me try a different 15p prop (although the same one may work when the engine geometry is optimized)...Or, does anyone have the perfect prop suggestion for this pontoon/motor combination? A SpiteFire of 13 or 15 pitch sounds appealing at the moment.... This combo should have another couple MPH hiding somewhere if the geometry and prop are right....even with the 23" logs. Cheers and thanks for replies.