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#41
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Skipper wrote:
Reggie Smithers wrote: Harry, If you are going to pretend you have me filtered, maybe it would work best if you didn't respond to my posts even 2nd hand. By the way, Yahoo and Comcast contacted me concerning your complaint about me "Spamming" you. I forwarded the two emails in question and they both realized that you were using the system to try to harass me. Since it would be very easy to block a user it was obvious to them that you reporting me as a SPAMMER was a feeble attempt to bring a NG disagreement out of the NG. This is a perfect example of why NO ONE should provide personal information in a NG. If you can try to screw someone based upon their Yahoo email, imagine what you would try if you knew a persons name. That might have been low for even for you. I know from personal experience that Krause Will use any info against you. -- Skipper I what way? Dan |
#42
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posted to rec.boats
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Harry Krause wrote:
I presented "Smithers" with many warnings to stop communicating with me. But, of course, he couldn't behave himself here or in email. So I contacted his ISP and complained that despite my telling him NOT to email me, he persisted. You're quite the puss, Krause. He has more class in his send button than you have in your entire being. -- Skipper |
#43
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... NOYB wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Skipper wrote: Reggie Smithers wrote: JimH, How can anyone know if the seller is being honest with the engine hours if their is not hour meter? For that matter, how can someone be sure if the seller is being honest about the engine hours even if their is an hour meter? Today's cars are set up to make it very hard to set back the mileage. I don't think there is anything similar for replacing the hour meter and just running the meter to provide a reasonable number of engine hours. You ask whether or not Krause is honest? Honest??? -- Skipper The data stored on the onboard computer on many modern outboard motors is quite revealing, a fact obviously unknown to Snipper and FourFeathersSmithers. I had the ECM replaced on my Suzuki at around 60 hours due to a recall. Twenty hours later, the oil light started flashing. Why? Because the engine was signaling me that it was due for the twenty hour service...even though it had 80 hours on it. The light failed to flash at the 100 hour mark for service...but started flashing at the 120 hour mark. There is a second recall on my boat for the ECM. After the replacement, my ECM will tell the technician that I have 0 hours on my engine. Obviously, it is quite possible that the onboard computer tells you nothing when you buy a new outboard. Oh, anything is possible. But I haven't had any "computer problems" with my Yamaha. And I have had no "computer probelms" with my Suzuki. The recall was based upon the fact that the engine was susceptible to backfiring if you threw it into reverse while still travelling in a forward motion at a high rate of speed. No offense, but I've not been overwhelmed by Suzuki outboards, and totally underwhelmed by the Suzuki outboard dealers. I'm not a huge fan of the Suzuki dealership that I bought it from, but three more have opened within 15 miles of my house since I bought mine a year and a half ago. Competition is sure to improve their CSI. The reason I chose the Suzuki over the Yamaha was the fact that the Suzuki was offered in a 250 hp, and the Yamaha was only available in a 225 (which really only puts out 217 hp). The other reason was that my brother had logged a couple of hundred hours on a Suzuki 140 without a single hiccup. The 16" prop and the lower gearing on the Suzuki make it a much better engine for a heavier boat. If you read Powerboat Reports, you'll see that the Suzuki finishes at the top of virtually every category that they measure when compared head-to-head with the Yamaha, Honda, and Verado...although I think that the Verado was a hair quieter. When I first started noticing Suzuki outboards while in Jax, the dealership was what I would call "fly by night," and, in fact, I hardly see any Suzuki outboards up here, although I am sure there is an active dealer somewhere in my area. What I see are Yamahas, Mercs, Evinrudes, and Hondas, in that order, in the larger engine categories. I don't pay much attention to the number of little outboards in the area, although I have noticed that Nissan seems to have a goodly share of the dinghy market. I had a 1986 Nissan on the back of my 13' Whaler. It was operated at two speeds: off and full-throttle. The engine started on the first try even after 15 years of use until we sold a couple of years ago. It didn't have the best corrosion resistance, but it was absolutely bulletproof. |
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