AndyG35
New Member
out of interest, which shaft length did you go for?I have a Zodiac 230 Aero which I use with a Torqeedo - it's an excellent combination.
out of interest, which shaft length did you go for?I have a Zodiac 230 Aero which I use with a Torqeedo - it's an excellent combination.
out of interest, which shaft length did you go for?
The Torqeedo 1103 only seems to be offered in standard and long shaft versions.
The Standard is 625mm from top of transom to centreline of the propeller.
The Long is 750mm.
thanksShort.
Yes, they are sold in the thousands - just not for use on dinghies as tenders.
As I have said many times, given that they have been on the market in the UK for at least 30 years, if they really were a viable product for use on tenders they would be everywhere and Torqeedo etc would never have got a look in.
The only thing that might shift the balance a bit is Lithium batteries, but once you combine those (at current costs) with the more powerful models much of the cost advantage disappears.
Because I asked a question then saw the answer was already in your post so felt foolish. Oops ?Why deleted Plum?
They are sold for use wherever anybody wants to use them, and I have seen more of them in use on dinghies than I have Torqeedos, which are a very expensive niche product. Having to use separate batteries is a bit of a disadvantage, which is probably why dinghy-sized outboards almost invariably have integral fuel tanks.
They haven't lost out to Torqeedo, which has a negligible (and almost certainly smaller) share of the outboard market. They and Torqeedo have both lost out to petrol outboards.
A reasonably powerful Bison + 36Ah AGM battery cost us roughly 10% as much as a Torqeedo. A £210 40Ah lithium battery would bump that up to 20%.
West Coast of Scotland, where everyone is poverty-stricken. I wouldn't say no to a Torqeedo myself if it was a third of the price and didn't look as if a four year old made the prototype out of Lego.Not sure where you sail JD, but for balance, down here (Devon) Torqueedos are not at all uncommon and the numbers are very noticeably increasing. I have never seen a real life trolling motor outside a chandlery or boat show.
West Coast of Scotland, where everyone is poverty-stricken.
Ah I did wonder as the little bell at the top of the page said you quoted me then it was deleted. I wondered what had happenedBecause I asked a question then saw the answer was already in your post so felt foolish. Oops ?
no worries, now that we have brexited we will all go down that particular panJust wait until you gain independence, then you'll realise what poverty really is!![]()
Can’t argue about the price but petrol outboards are hardly things of beauty.West Coast of Scotland, where everyone is poverty-stricken. I wouldn't say no to a Torqeedo myself if it was a third of the price and didn't look as if a four year old made the prototype out of Lego.
I’m waiting patiently for a Chinese entrepreneur to ‘do a Chinaspacher’ on Torqueedo.
A Chineedo?
A Torqueedon’t?
yep, they are and they are. The Germans do the qc and marketing of Tqs, I think.It's called an e-propulsion. And I wouldn't be surprised if Torqeedos are manufactured in China too
I read that E-Propulsion was set up by ex-Torqeedo employees. And they are about the same price.It's called an e-propulsion. And I wouldn't be surprised if Torqeedos are manufactured in China too