Hey Gents
I graduated from Seastar Kicker Tie Bar high school so I can (yes, not a common thing for me), speak with some degree of authority on these things...
1)) They are easy to install as long as the tilt tubes in both the kicker and main are rust free and easy to get to
2) Critical part of the DYI: make sure that if you have a bundle of steering and shift cables and tank hose, that it is held in the proper orientation (either port or starboard of the kicker depending on your off-set etc. ) and once you’ve decided where they coil, make sure THE KICKER TURNS BACK AND FORTH ATTACHED TO THE MAIN OUTBOARD FREELY WITH ZERO BINDING
3) Yes, you can leave the kicker attached and in fully tilted up position when underway or when motoring around a dock but I am here to tell you that there are lots of stories of bent tie rods from people doing exactly that.
4). My recommendation (FWIW): any time you’re at the dock or coming on and off a trailer and need to make sharp turns in a tight location, lower the kicker a bit, even all the way down so you don’t stress that tie bar—-it’s the hard-over angle of the dangle port to starboard and back again that will kill those bars
Again, that was FWIW. I burned through two tie bars and heard the stories of bent bars on the interweb and saw the pictures. On my third one, I saw where the main stress occurred and I wanted a work-around to make sure that bar stayed straight and true, especially when I was in the middle of nowhere and could not afford to compromise that connection
Yes, they’re expensive but worse, when they bend they bind and you will lose steering with both outboards until you disconnect the bar from the main engine
Just to underscore that I’m not making this up, a guy at Seastar actually recommended that I disconnect the tie-bar when I’m running then get out on the swim step and re-connect when I wanted to start fishing (???? Wtf???)
‘Nuff said....