Ernie, not sure I understand the paint stick trick. Are you putting them under where the motor sits on the transom? The height of the motor on my transom is where it should be according to Mercury and the dealer. The cavitation plate is just a tick below the hull. I can't run with the motor trimmed all the way down, it puts the motor too low in the water and while it lowers the bow, it creates drag that slows the boat considerably. I with the motor trimmed down to the point where the cowling is level with the water, again how Mercury recommends. The Estuary is a 15kt boat according to what I've heard, I've only been able to push it to 12 and thats empty.
Tom, I have a good relationship with my dealer. For those in Central Jersey and own a Mercury, N&B marine in Bordentown is the best. I love those folks there...so helpful and they're honest in what they do. They're going to lend me props to try and even they're handheld tach. They really take care of their customers. As far as props, people underestimate the importance of prop selection, especially on heavier boats. Not turning enough RPMs or turning too many can shorten the engine life and cause internal parts to fail. Solas designing this high thrust prop specifically for heavy boats with small motors and kicker motors. So hopefully it'll push me up to 15kts and run right in the proper RPM range. We'll see!
And yes, every manufacturer, I don't care if its Ford, Chevy, Dodge or Mercury, Yamaha, Johnson...they will all get their lemons. I'm partial to Mercury because I learned how to rebuild them when I was 15. I've never had a Merc leave me stranded on the water...can't say the same about Johnson/Evinrude.