So, you are the one that wakes me up every morning while at anchor in some
of the quietest places on earth! I won't feel so bad about running my genny
at first light now if I see you in the harbor.
It seems to me that the Cruise and Carry is probably the most noisy outboard
ever made! - Do the new models come with earplugs?
Regards...
Capt Bob Widmann
M/V 'RUSTY NAIL'
43' M/T Tradewinds
Madison, CT
"A 40 footer tied to the dock beats a suitcase full of money"
SNIP>>2-cylinder, and the Cruise-N-Carry. I carry the dink on Weaver Davits
on
the swim platform. In the morning, when our dog wants her walk, guess what
combination carries us to shore. I can give the dink a push, let it splash
down, grab the Cruise-N-Carry, climb down the ladder to the swim platform,
and be on my way with the dog. <<SNIP
rustynail@snet.net writes:
It seems to me that the Cruise and Carry is probably the most noisy
outboard
ever made!
I beg to differ. According to my "friends" I hold that record with my
2 1/2 HP antique "British Seagull". (Perhaps they'll take up a
collection to buy me a MinnKota?) <grin>
Ciao - George of Scaramouche
Capt'n Bob wrote:
:It seems to me that the Cruise and Carry is probably the most
:noisy outboard ever made!
My vote goes to the venerable British Seagull for the same reason. Wide
open throttle to push whatever at 4 kts through the quiet anchorage.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike O'Reilly" mso@pobox.com
My vote goes to the venerable British Seagull for the same reason. Wide
open throttle to push whatever at 4 kts through the quiet anchorage.
Hi Mike,
The key word in that sentence is "whatever"; About 35 years ago my dad had a
Seagull that would push an 8 foot dinghy at about 4 kts. However, in a local
"dinghy derby" that same motor proved capable of pushing a 25 foot half
rotten wooden hull with at least 6 fully grown and totally drunk men aboard.
They needed that size crew in order to keep the boat somewhat bailed out.
Speed? About 4 kts. BTW: They won easily.
I suspect that motor may have been capable of pushing North America at about
4 kts.
Reminiscently yours,
Alex
alexh@gte.net writes:
I suspect that motor may have been capable of pushing North America
at about
4 kts.
Apparently it pushed some of the "D-Day" fleet across the British
Channel - probably at about 4 knots... <grin>
George of Scaramouche
At 2238 4/6/01 -0500, you wrote:
alexh@gte.net writes:
I suspect that motor may have been capable of pushing North America
at about
4 kts.
Apparently it pushed some of the "D-Day" fleet across the British
Channel - probably at about 4 knots... <grin>
George of Scaramouche
I used one as an auxiliary on a 26 foot sailboat. It pushed it at about 4
knots. Best outboard I ever had.
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Michael Gibbons
http://www.seadreamer.net
40' Marine Trader
"Sea Dreamer"
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