Yes you can. You have to know 2 things about your boat: 1. Can you pull someone out of the water with your motor? ( for a 16 ft fiberglass boat you need at the very least 80hp, but a 120 does better) 2. Do you have a place to mount the tower and not have it rip out? There is a lot of pressure on that thing
Freeze plugs
Well how does a 1993 Kawasaki 750Ss jet ski cool? The motor of the 1993 750SS and all other two stroke jet skis cool with water that flows through the water jackets of the motor and the exhaust. I will further explain this using jet engine theory. A jet engine sucks in air, squeezes the air, and the blows it out the back end, which in case makes the plane or car move very fast. Well in case of a jet ski, it sucks the lake or ocean water in through the intake grate on the bottom of the ski, runs it through the different areas of the motor and the jet pump, (squeezes it)and then shoots it out the jet nozzle on the rear of the ski, in which case propels the ski through the water. The more throttle the rider gives the ski, the faster the process goes and thus the faster the jet ski will move.
The scooter of the ocean is something called a jet-ski, you know, those motor objects that float on the water?
Water box is designed to create back pressure for the motor and also to muffle the sound of the exhaust.
Yes, but it does depend on the skill of the skier and to some extent the design of the water skis.
the vin# is kaw27661E090
Sega Water Ski happened in 1997.
Sega Water Ski was created in 1997.
You could practically ask any Jet ski Motor specialist for help.
yes with some changes
The short answer is no. Boats are made with outboard, inboard-outboard, a hybrid using an inboard engine driving a stern mounted shaft that looks like the lower end of an outboard. Others use inboard engines, typically larger cruiser and specialty ski boats. Personal watercraft use a inboard engine powering a water jet pump. This jet drive system is also used in some boats. Most smaller boats are powered by outboards. New large outboards up to 400HP permit larger boats some over 30 ft long to be outboard powered. Most mid-size boats from 18-30 feet are powered by inboard-outboard systems to take advantage of larger automotive engines.