maby
Well-Known Member
Is the Isle of Man sufficiently far outside the EU for this?
I think a few yards outside the EU is enough!
Is the Isle of Man sufficiently far outside the EU for this?
Umm...what's the fixation with Seagulls, gents? Or is it a joke I haven't understood? When they were still available new, I distinctly remember they were perpetually cursed for being wretchedly temperamental. That intense frustration seems to have been forgotten in retrospect, like all the wet weeks in summers of the past.
I had the use of a little Yamaha 2hp one summer 30 years ago...it was extremely handy and never failed. Are the 2-stroke outboards which are still available new overseas, just old stock, or is the UK subject to laws which the rest of the world ignores?
Dan, AFAIR, it was regulations that killed Seagulls, not lack of demand. ISTR that it was early emissions regulations that killed them - it was impossible to meet them without a total redesign that BS weren't in a position to do. According to "Saving Old Seagulls" in 1977, British Seagull were making 80,000 of them a year, and total production was over a million!
Forty plus 2-3 hp
Forty minus 1-2 hp
Do some people close their eyes when putting their outboards down? Sort of like tossing a coin. It would be bad luck to choose to lay it down one way?
You put sheets on winches a certain way. You put the anchor in it's wedges a certain way. You make off on a cleat in a certain way. But outboards. Just however they fall is good.
Yes
No
Four strokes have to lie on one side, or oil goes in places it's not supposed to. That's why there are lugs on one particular side to lie them on.
Just like it doesn't work loading a winch backwards... ;-)
I'm looking for a good excuse to modify a strimmer and make a little inboard engine setup in a kayak or a dinghy. Why not try that?
...let's hope Dylan did not see that...
Imagine. A duck-punt converted to a miniature, strimmer-driven stern-wheeler.