retroicon
XX-xx-XX-xx-XX
Hey all,
So I'm going to be buying a 3-seater to pull the kids around on some tubes, and wakeboards and stuff like that... but I'm not sure whether I should go with a used 2-stroke, or a new 4-stroke.
Price isn't the issue, it's more a matter or maintenance, and specifically... what happens if you roll a 4-stroke and end up with water ingestion? I know that, at some point someone is going to flip the machine once the kids are old enough to so start driving on their own... but I have no idea what the procedure is if you flip a 4-stroke.
On a 2-stroke you bring it to shore, pull the plugs, crank the water out, and go... but on a 4-stroke I have no idea.
Not sure if this matters, but it'll be 50/50 fresh and salt use.
I've been on 2-strokes for 20 years, always Yamaha, and know those engines as well as any backyard mechanic & ex-racer can... that said, I've been hearing good stuff about the 4-strokes from rental operators, and a lot of guys seem to be getting 500-1,000 hours on them with just standard maintenance, oil changes, and the normal stuff.
I know I could have posted this on the other boards, but this is where most of the 2-stroke guys hang out, and since I'm a stand-up and blaster guy myself, I figured I'd get the kind of opinion I can relate to here...
Basically, I've been on 2-strokes forever, and don't know anything about 4-strokes and I'm kind of nervous to make the jump... the big issue is, what happens if you roll one. It's only a matter of time before it happens.
Thanks!
So I'm going to be buying a 3-seater to pull the kids around on some tubes, and wakeboards and stuff like that... but I'm not sure whether I should go with a used 2-stroke, or a new 4-stroke.
Price isn't the issue, it's more a matter or maintenance, and specifically... what happens if you roll a 4-stroke and end up with water ingestion? I know that, at some point someone is going to flip the machine once the kids are old enough to so start driving on their own... but I have no idea what the procedure is if you flip a 4-stroke.
On a 2-stroke you bring it to shore, pull the plugs, crank the water out, and go... but on a 4-stroke I have no idea.
Not sure if this matters, but it'll be 50/50 fresh and salt use.
I've been on 2-strokes for 20 years, always Yamaha, and know those engines as well as any backyard mechanic & ex-racer can... that said, I've been hearing good stuff about the 4-strokes from rental operators, and a lot of guys seem to be getting 500-1,000 hours on them with just standard maintenance, oil changes, and the normal stuff.
I know I could have posted this on the other boards, but this is where most of the 2-stroke guys hang out, and since I'm a stand-up and blaster guy myself, I figured I'd get the kind of opinion I can relate to here...
Basically, I've been on 2-strokes forever, and don't know anything about 4-strokes and I'm kind of nervous to make the jump... the big issue is, what happens if you roll one. It's only a matter of time before it happens.
Thanks!