ostell
Well-Known Member
I have a friend with a 26 ft Bilge keeler and he wants to fit an outboard as an emergency unit. He is thinking of 2.5hp. What does the esteemed forum think would be a suitable size?
I have a friend with a 26 ft Bilge keeler and he wants to fit an outboard as an emergency unit. He is thinking of 2.5hp. What does the esteemed forum think would be a suitable size?
Eric and Susan Hiscock managed to circumnavigate the globe in a heavy 30-foot yacht fitted with a 4hp engine. I should think a 2.5hp engine on a 26-footer would be perfectly adequate.
In a real emergency he could always sail.![]()
I have a friend with a 26 ft Bilge keeler and he wants to fit an outboard as an emergency unit. He is thinking of 2.5hp. What does the esteemed forum think would be a suitable size?
Seagull Silver Century.
never leave home without it
it seems to me that the reason for having spare power is to avoid being towed into a marina if you get crud around the inboard prop
I just could not bare the humiliation of being brought home by the RNLI
My Tohatsu long shaft slept soundly in the quarter berth right around the top of scotland
but it was good to know it was there
when the quarter berth is needed it sits on the bracket on the back
although the new Centaur has an almost new Yanmar power unit which I expect to be dead reliable it offers little protection against these furkin things
Simple answer o that problem is to invest in a rope cutter.
BTW how many times have you actually been disabled through crud round the prop? and needed a tow into port?
crud around the prop three times so far in the past eight years
twin or bilge keelers so I willfully ran them aground to deal with the problem
So I dealt with it myself - however..... the humiliation would be too much to bare
We had a 4hp engine for our dinghy and had a transom bracket on our 25ft fin keel boat and it worked fine even got about 2 knots into a F8 once. Never needed it for real but it was nice to know it was there, also the transom bracket made moving to and from the dinghy much easier and safer
So, did you avoid humiliation by using your outboard and could the crud have been prevented by taking effective precautions against it?
You seem to worry about some things that are not worth worrying about and not taking preventative action that is proven against things that you know do happen.
Just saying.
Newbie question, can you fit a long shaft onto an inflatable tender or do you need a special transom? I'm by guessing that a long shaft is the only way to go when/if it's mounted on the stern on a bracket.
I guess that is the penalty of over-sharing