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Boat House
New and old boat at the same time
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<blockquote data-quote="FuzzyGrub" data-source="post: 219678" data-attributes="member: 3438"><p>No, I haven't done it. Considered buying a 10hp + cam, back in '97. I ended up with the larger displacement 18hp. I have seen numerous reports from people who have done it with positive results.</p><p></p><p></p><p>From a Nissan/Tohatsu dealer: </p><p>Re: Changing throttle cam on Nissan/Tohatsu 9.9 with boat in water </p><p>Pull the starter housing, disconnect the timing link, turn the coil plate exposing the two bolts on the cam....That's it. Five minutes at most, ten if you are scared of making a mistake, twenty if you are dumb as a tree stump, an hour if you are an engineer. Just the swap. No other adjustments. </p><p></p><p>I'd have to search a bit more to find the throttle/cam part number.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FuzzyGrub, post: 219678, member: 3438"] No, I haven't done it. Considered buying a 10hp + cam, back in '97. I ended up with the larger displacement 18hp. I have seen numerous reports from people who have done it with positive results. From a Nissan/Tohatsu dealer: Re: Changing throttle cam on Nissan/Tohatsu 9.9 with boat in water Pull the starter housing, disconnect the timing link, turn the coil plate exposing the two bolts on the cam....That's it. Five minutes at most, ten if you are scared of making a mistake, twenty if you are dumb as a tree stump, an hour if you are an engineer. Just the swap. No other adjustments. I'd have to search a bit more to find the throttle/cam part number. [/QUOTE]
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New and old boat at the same time
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