I agree with
@OrangeTJ . It does not take much at all to cause cavitation and / or vibration. Something as small as a pencil eraser or a few inches of fishing line will do it. Anyone new to the experience may freak out but once you've been through it successfully you should be able to handle it a lot better. It only happens to me once a year. A few years ago we just got back to the boat after eating at a restaurant on the water! somehow a small twig, maybe a half inch long got in the intake and it floated to the front of the intake when I pulled the cleanout plug so it was hard to get. Anyway, the whole crew freaked out as we were miles from the dock but my son and I knew exactly what it was. I Pulled the clean out plug, fished around for the twig and we were on our way in less than 5 minutes.
Anyway, when, not if, it happens again. Make sure you do a thorough check of the intake on the pump giving you problems. Not just what you can see through the clean out port but get your hand closer to the front of the intake if you can. Slide yours fingers along the shaft (this is not meant to be a comment with sexual undertones) to feel for fishing line and if you have to get in the water to reach debris stuck /blocking the intake grate. The latter is how it is done on jet boats without cleanout plugs, I call it the old fashion way. Not eloquent but effective, the reverse trick doesn't help when the debris is vegetation that is over a a few feet long with part of it out side the intake and most of it stuck past the intake / before the impeller. I learned this the hard way.
My primary point being, don't take it to the dealer right away. Check here first especially if you are just staring. Your boating trip or going to the dealer is inconvenient. We probably could have saved you the trip and reduced the anxiety you experienced. Oh, and add a blade of some kind to cut though debris like vegetation or rope to your boating gear.[/QUOTEThanks for the tips I appreciate it