2 Cool Fishing Forum banner

Yamaha SHO vs Yamaha F Series

1 reading
18K views 11 replies 11 participants last post by  Swampman  
#1 ·
Starting to kick the tires or hulls on a new or slightly used boat. In doing my research, I'm fairly certain I'm going to go with a Yamaha motor. Given this, it looks like there are 2 different 4 strokes offered by Yamaha. The VMax SHO and the F series, but I can't find a difference between the 2. Per Yamaha's website, they both are the same everything in specs, so I'm hoping to get some help with why one is better than the other. Prices I'm finding suggest there's a difference. So far, all I can see is the one is black and one is gray....:rotfl:

Here is the link to the Yamaha site that shows the comparison between the two.

https://yamahaoutboards.com/en-us/utility/engine-comparison?E28
 
#3 ·
Lots of difference in performance between the two. SHO performs like a 2 stroke on holeshot, the F series not so much. Saying that, the F series are very reliable, whereas you see blown powerheads in the SHOs. If I had a cat style boat, it would be a SHO for sure, a deep runner it really wouldn't matter.
 
#6 ·
What size motor? F115 or F250?

The post linked above states that the rev limits on the “f” series are lower than the SHO, incorrect. The gray F115lb is 5300-6300 and looks identical under the hood. Supposed to be some tuning differences F vs. SHO.

With a new upper target of 6,300 rpms it is going to sound underpropped. I’m ordering a new lower pitch prop for mine in about a week that should top out at around 6,300, I imagine it will be like driving a car around in a lower gear but should pull the occasional skier.

If you’re looking at a bigger engine, ignore everything I said.
 
#7 ·
What size motor? F115 or F250?

The post linked above states that the rev limits on the “f” series are lower than the SHO, incorrect. The gray F115lb is 5300-6300 and looks identical under the hood. Supposed to be some tuning differences F vs. SHO.

With a new upper target of 6,300 rpms it is going to sound underpropped. I’m ordering a new lower pitch prop for mine in about a week that should top out at around 6,300, I imagine it will be like driving a car around in a lower gear but should pull the occasional skier.

If you’re looking at a bigger engine, ignore everything I said.
Either the 115 on a 19' or a 150 on a 21'

A found a few other articles that suggest the SHO actually produces about 7-9 more HP than what is advertised. So the 115, actually puts out closer to 125. The industry allows for 10% variation in advertised HP up or down.
 
#9 ·
For the most part the F series ( Offshore) are fly by wire and the VF series (SHO) are mechanical controls. They now offer a mechanical version on certain offshore F motors, and there are 20” and 25” shaft SHOs, clear as mud huh? FWIW the VF250 SHO 25” motor is a mechanical version of the F300. They’re all good motors , I had a F250 Offshore on my last boat and it was good, but I’m loving the VF 250 SHO on my new boat. Night and day.
 
#12 ·
About the same

I fished the last two days out of a demo 25 Xtreme with a 250 SHO. Dealer met me at the launch at noon with my new rig which is same boat with 4 stroke 250. Hole shot was the same, mid range was better with 4 stroke, 2 mph faster WOT with SHO. Boats are rigged identical. SHO is sup'ed up so more likely to fail before the base 4 stroke. Just my 2 cents...