two other things to mention:(1) if the cylinder leaks, the motor goes _down_. you have 400-500 pounds of motor that the two cylinders hold up while running, or when you trim all the way out of the water, the center cylinder now holds everything. If it leaks, first floor here we come.(2) Ive seen a few failures of the bow-mounted trim switch if you have one. I burned out a trim pump motor on a new boat back in 1992. Apparently towing home in a monsoon got water into the switch. I left the boat in the driveway until the rain stopped and when I went out, motor was trimmed all the way up. My first question was “who raised the motor?” No responses. I tried to lower it, and _nothing_. When I went to the back, it smelled badly. Eventually found that the front switch had water in it, and apparently as it mixed with the grease used in the switch, it made a conductive concoction that raised the motor and continued to raise it until the pump burned out. Luckily it was a warranty repair.I have see more failures on the cowling switch, next comes the bow switch. The throttle switch seems to be reliable, and the “turn signal” type trim switch has never caused me or anybody I know any problems.You can get a relay on the motor that sticks, but you have to press the button first, but releasing it doesnt stop the pump.2008 Pantera Classic2014 Mercury Pro XS 200