[Public-List] tip up motor
John Riley
jriley at dsbscience.com
Mon Apr 9 06:40:04 PDT 2012
Randy Whitney wrote:
> Nice job. Well thought out for the user's needs, but not my cup of tea.
>
> - moves weight further aft and higher
>
Not compared to an outboard on the stern. The engine is moved forward,
and the outboard is a few hundred pounds lighter than an inboard.
> - encourages use of former engine space to be used for stores further
> encouraging squat in the stern
>
Not likely the stores in that space are heavier than the engine that was
there.
Converting to an outboard in a well is usually a re-powering option, not
typically one of removing a working inboard to put in an outboard.
Outboards in wells are INCREDIBLY seaworthy compared to other outboard
engine mounting options. There are pros and cons compared to inboards.
I see the appeal. I'm considering going to an outboard in a well for my
Alberg 30; it has no inboard engine now, and I long ago decided I will
not replace it. The space and weight improvements are favored and I've
already glassed over several through-hulls that were engine related.
This solution is not for everybody, and that's cool. Maybe an inboard
is "the best" by some metrics and for some boaters; but if an outboard
engine is the re-power option, putting it in a well beats hanging it off
the transom in many, many ways.
(One of the things I do like about my outboard on the transom is that if
forces my to think like I'm sailing an engineless boat...this psychology
is just "different")
--
John S. Riley
S/V Gaelic Sea
1972 Alberg 30 #521
1333978804.0
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