Also agree to go for the max HP, but I was also under the impression 2 strokes are being phased out due to emission laws??
Years ago Mercury outboards were only good as anchors, but I have a mate in the boating industry who says they have lifted there game and are now on the way to becoming market leaders.
Yep..bought a two stroke yammie 15 for my tinny. Evinrude e-tec the only one. I,d go 4 stroke any day. I,ve had 200 yammie 4 strokes, 130 optimax 2 strokes and many other various 2 and 4 strokes. 4 stroke is the future. I bought a yammie 15 2 stroke as it is only for a runabout and lighter to handle with the camper trailer.
Gardening equipment, outboard motors and generators capable of emitting more pollution than a car are being phased out in Australia from this weekend.
QUOTE...
Gardening equipment, outboard motors and generators capable of emitting more pollution than a car are being phased out in Australia.
As of July 1, companies will be banned from importing high-emission lawn mowers, mulchers, leaf blowers, generators, chainsaws, outboard boat motors and other hand-held equipment that doesn't comply with new standards.
Businesses still selling non-compliant equipment have 12 months to offload their stock.
Key points
From July 1, 2018, only products that meet emissions standards or have an exemption will be allowed into Australia.
From July 1, 2019, only products that meet emissions standards or have an exemption will be allowed to be supplied in Australia.
New emissions standards apply to new products. They do not apply to engines and equipment people already own or to second-hand engines and equipment.
Source: Department of Environment and Energy
Gary Fooks, chair of the Blue Sky Alliance, worked for more than a decade with the federal government and industry to bring Australia in line with Europe, the United States and China.
He said research released by the government in the late 1990s revealed some Australian lawn mowers could emit up to 40 times the emissions of a car.
"Lawn mowers and brush cutters, they're used half a metre from your nose," he told ABC Radio Brisbane's Loretta Ryan.