Actually I have a car lift to lift the motor. Already have the jack plate on the boat, so thought having some adjustment might be good as opposed to bolting right to the transom. As "manual" as it is, it seems a better solution for experimenting than bolting the motor directly to the transom.
. . . In the era when your hull was built, outboards were far heavier than they are now. . .
Quote from: boatnamesue on January 23, 2018, 08:42:55 PM. . . In the era when your hull was built, outboards were far heavier than they are now. . . This is not exactly true. The switch to four stroke or direct injection added weight. The original 150 Mercury Black Max that I pulled from my 1979 CCP had a published weight of 385 lbs. I’m not sure if that weight included the remote trim & tilt pump or not.Here are the current lightest published weights for new 150 outboards (ranked lightest to heaviest):Evenrude Etec 418 lbsMercury 455 lbsYamaha 478 lbsEvenrude G2 496 lbsSuzuki 511 lbsThese numbers are just a starting point for comparisons because some mfgs publish dry weight, some publish weight with oil, and there are differences in displacement that are a factor too.Please note, I’m not disputing your original premise that the boat can handle the 150, just that motors are getting lighter. In any case since the OP is hanging his older 370 lb two stroke, this part of the discussion doesn’t really apply to him.Sorry I’m not trying to be argumentative, but many of us put a lot of thought into repowering with four strokes and the additional 100 pounds this entails. For me, I’m going with a flotation bracket,relocating two batteries to my console, moving the CG of my fuel tank 8” forward and raising my floor, all to maintain trim and keep my scuppers above water.
Truthfully, if you were shopping for new power, I think you’d do just fine with a 115 which weighs about 350. The specs on your 191 in terms of weight and fuel are really close to the 170 which performs just great with 90-115 hp.