I think it agreed this is a bit of BS.
At such high speed a shift into reverse will do a "bit" of damage and I doubt the LU will be fit to rotate the engine in any direction!
And if it were possible for there to be enough water pressure on the propellor to rotate the engine backwards (me thinks more BS), thee sudden reversal would blow things to Smithreen.
I think the writer may have meant a sudden deceleration can create sufficient "vacuum pulses" that can introduce water back into the exhaust. Very feasible in two strokes. A four stroke does not necessarily automatically work in reverse - the piston just continues to move up and down not knowing the engine rotation. However I suspect a four stroke outboard would not act kindly pushed in reverse, so water ingestion would be the least of your worries!
At such high speed a shift into reverse will do a "bit" of damage and I doubt the LU will be fit to rotate the engine in any direction!
And if it were possible for there to be enough water pressure on the propellor to rotate the engine backwards (me thinks more BS), thee sudden reversal would blow things to Smithreen.
I think the writer may have meant a sudden deceleration can create sufficient "vacuum pulses" that can introduce water back into the exhaust. Very feasible in two strokes. A four stroke does not necessarily automatically work in reverse - the piston just continues to move up and down not knowing the engine rotation. However I suspect a four stroke outboard would not act kindly pushed in reverse, so water ingestion would be the least of your worries!
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