Rivers & creeks
Well-Known Member
And many people like Seagulls! I grew up with them, and will admit that there is probably a knack to operating them. But I don't recognize any of the starting problems people report - ours simply worked! If it didn't start quickly, you cleaned the plug and then it went. The only other (embarrassing) causes of it not starting were forgetting to unscrew the air vent on the tank or failing to open the fuel valve. Once those things were attended to, it worked. My brother and I had hours of fun zipping around in an inflatable powered by a Seagull (to pacify Dylan and others, I'll note that we didn't do this near other boats!); never once do I recall it failing to start once you did the right things. And you very quickly got into the knack of closing the fuel valve the right distance from the end of your run, so the carburettor is empty when it stops.
However, if you read the SOS site, you'll note that John tells of problems with machines that are Franken-Seagulls (he doesn't use that term!). Sadly, because of the interchangeability of parts between different models, there are Seagulls out there that have been put together from mis-matched parts. Sometimes that's fine; other times it isn't. I suspect a lot of the tales of Seagulls that are perennially unreliable etc. are machines that have been botched together with mis-matched parts from different models.
The other thing is that they won't work if the prop is too deep - the exhaust exits below the water and if there's too much back pressure, the engine won't run. A long-shaft model on a dinghy won't work, in general.
I'm not currently a Seagull owner!
Lovely post. If I may sumarise:
A Seagull outboard may or may not start, if it does start you love it more and if it doesn't then with a decent tool kit and maybe by sitting out of reach of the whip cord you can almost certainly start/fix it unless you have a bad one, in which case it'll always be rubbish.
I don't love my tender outboard because it just works. I love my dog though, even though he is the most stupidish animal I've met and after two years still cannot be trusted not to shit on the kitchen floor. But maybe his recalcitrance is the reason I love him and one person it seems loves Seagulls. You're welcome to them, machinery has moved on and I now have an inbuilt expectation that it will work. Seagulls and Stuart Turners belong to an age when you were pleasantly surprised if something worked. Like NASA always applauds a successful launch cos they sort of aren't sure if it will go OK.