Nice! Great looking setup!
ColeSL wrote:
I bad some funny depth finder reading which scared the shit out of me. The reading went as low as 1.9 ft for a good 20 seconds which didnt seem right at all so i dont know what's up with that.
You may want to try cleaning your transducer. Do a search on this forum as I think other people have experienced something similar.
ColeSL wrote:
Also the gas gauge was full all the time but would go to 3/4 when i come to stop. It fluctuates a lot so will have to check that out when i add gas next time.
That's normal on any boat. I typically track fuel consumption via the hour meter by recording gallons per hour. You first have to get a good baseline, then I keep track of how many hours between fills. Neither this method or the gas guage are a perfect science, but I don't like to to be towed in (especially for being out of fuel) so I watch both.
ColeSL wrote:
Other thing, first time boater here, is it normal that the gear engages hard, it makes a loud clunk each time?
Neither modern Volvos or Mercs should clunk too hard when going into gear. Being a first time boater, you may be easing it into gear. Once you get some time at the helm, you can feel the point where the drive engages in both forward and reverse. Find that point and go right to it. If you ease it in to gear too softly, you can often hear the teeth grind followed by a clunk when they fully engage. That being said, you may want to ask your dealer to take a quick ride with you to 1) give you some confidence and 2) make sure everything does sound normal.
ColeSL wrote:
P.s backing up in a spot was a pain in the butt with the strong river curent. I have a feeling that will be a long time learning process.
Yeah, dealing with strong currents and/or winds can trip up the most experienced boaters from time to time. Take your time, don't panic and don't overreact. I find it always easier to approach a dock or landing from downstream where you can be under power the entire time and manipulate your approach with the throttle. I see too many people that try to line their boats up and let the currents bring them in. The problem with that is you can't control the current. Like anything else, practice makes perfect.