Pete the Cat
Sustaining Member
One person on board it is an Achilles 9 ft. hypalon dinghy with aluminum floor--but I think it would plane with two with one of the new lightweight RiBs.I had no idea a 6hp could make a dinghy plane. Impressive.
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One person on board it is an Achilles 9 ft. hypalon dinghy with aluminum floor--but I think it would plane with two with one of the new lightweight RiBs.I had no idea a 6hp could make a dinghy plane. Impressive.
I will keep my Torqeedo in the dinghy overnight if I’m going to use it the following day but I NEVER leave it attached to the dinghy while towing it cause that’s just asking for trouble. When not on the dinghy I keep the drive section on a bracket at the pushpit with the battery and tiller below. I don’t worry about keeping it out in the weather because it’s supposedly made to stand that sort of exposure. When I’m transferring the drive section to the dinghy I keep a line tied around it with the bitter end tied to a cleat just in case it gets dropped into the water. I use to do the same with my gasoline outboards in the past.For those who owns Torqeedo electric outboard, do you keep the unit attached to dinghy at night or store the battery and control handle from the weather?
I also have both, Torqeedo and an old 2-cycle outboard that weighs in barely 20 lbs. I don't think twice leaving the outboard with the dinghy overnight but unsure how weather proof is the Torqeedo unit. After all, it is electronic and we all know how marine electronics are.
Oooooh, Christian, that seagull does capture the eye and the imagination! Truly, a piece of art, for those who understand.How about a 60's-vintage British Seagull?
I'm going to get one, clean it up, and mount it in the living room as a piece of art.
I spent more time pulling that starter cord than I did motoring it. Also, somewhere on the floor of the Sound off Connecticut is the Seagull that flew off the transom as I was demonstrating tight turns at age 15. Learned to tighten the dogs and have a safety line, and how to feel really stupid.
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I feel the same way about vintage sewing machines and typewriters. Now I'll have to add vintage outboards to the list.
I think they would make an excellent icon of British mechanical malpractice. I tried in vain to help the hapless folks who bought in them in the 1970s during their heyday. I think their ugliness was part of the appeal: something this mechanically ugly was presumed to be at least be reliable. Turns out they weren't. I have considered producing book of failed marine inventions---my ancestors actually had a factory in New York in the early 1900s that turned out many of them. I have their catalog from 1910-its amusing, and the likely reason our name is not on any modern marine equipment. But the folly continues.How about a 60's-vintage British Seagull?
I'm going to get one, clean it up, and mount it in the living room as a piece of art.
I spent more time pulling that starter cord than I did motoring it. Also, somewhere on the floor of the Sound off Connecticut is the Seagull that flew off the transom as I was demonstrating tight turns at age 15. Learned to tighten the dogs and have a safety line, and how to feel really stupid.
View attachment 47573
How about a 60's-vintage British Seagull?
I'm going to get one, clean it up, and mount it in the living room as a piece of art.
And then, of course, there's British electrical malpractice.I think they would make an excellent icon of British mechanical malpractice.
Ya just gotta love that thumb-lever throttle!there seems to be quite a few of these masterpieces for sale out there:
british seagull outboard motor - boat parts - by owner - marine sale
british seagull outboard motor it has compression so it's not seized. i've never used it or tested it. i'm selling it as untested and to be safe - non-working, for parts or repair it's missing the...ventura.craigslist.org
I’m sure the admiral will appreciate the new “decoration”
: )
Our Suzuki 6 hp will plane our 8 foot high-pressure floor Zodiac with my wife and I onboard (about 310 lbs of people)One person on board it is an Achilles 9 ft. hypalon dinghy with aluminum floor--but I think it would plane with two with one of the new lightweight RiBs.
My fuel was treated with BioborEB, which was the top-rated stabilizer by Practical Sailor (I believe). The fuel still went bad and destroyed my carb when it sat in my unused outboard for around 10 months during the family emergency I mentioned. I'm not taking any more chances with stabilizers.For ethanol concerns I am a fan of the product "Sea Foam". I restored and maintained a small fleet of 2.3's and the carbs stayed clear as long as an additive was used.
That's also the traditional advice for the two stroke OB's back in the 70's, to keep the fuel from gumming up in the carburetor.My belief is that if you run the engine out of gas before you store it for any length of time, you can avoid many of the evils of ethanol
70’s?? I still use a 2 stroke sailmaster! : ) I’m almost hoping it dies so I have an excuse to upgrade to a more fuel efficient 4 stroke but it just doesn’t quit! I always drain the carb though.That's also the traditional advice for the two stroke OB's back in the 70's, to keep the fuel from gumming up in the carburetor.