Re: [Cal_Boats]Sea skiffs, Indy structural Evinrudes...(CH)

Re: [Cal_Boats]Sea skiffs, Indy structural Evinrudes...(CH)

2 messages2009-02-21 05:41 UTCthrough 2009-02-23 01:21 UTC

Re: [Cal_Boats]Sea skiffs, Indy structural Evinrudes...(CH)

Gerald Sobel2009-02-21 05:41 UTC
I --- On Fri, 2/20/09, Gerald Sobel <so… [at] yahoo.com> wrote: From: Gerald Sobel <so… [at] yahoo.com> Subject: [Cal_Boats] Indy structural Evinrudes...not, waz CAL-20 outboard(CH) To: Ca… [at] yahoogroups.com Date: Friday, February 20, 2009, 2:57 PM Indestructable Evinrude..of the 70's and 80's? Not so, I slopped a slug of oil from the plastic bottle in my gas in a rush to get the Cal 24 out and to a starting line, and while running full throttle down the main channel to the breakwater the engine puttered and died....froze- up!. The bearings were toast, my mechanic said and it would cost more than the motor was worth to fix it. Ah Ha, now, regarding the fabled Evinrudes, don't get me wrong... the 1960 Golden Anniversary Evinrude outboard...that's another...uh..outboard. In my garage is my Dad's (he didn't like the word Pop...) 51/2 HP Envinrude Fisherman. That motor took us...the whole family... deep sea fishing out of marinas up and down the coast of New Jersey, on rented wooden skiffs of all sorts, and never missed a beat. I had it restored a few years ago...uh..ten years ago, but since it's a short shaft I've never gotten to use it. But thar it is, already to go on another expedition for flounder...or..halibut as they call them giant man eating flounder on the west coast. The motor has mixture controls and a pressurization system, dual fuel lines, and the tank has a built in priming bulb. Pretty cool. Speaking of skiffs, there's a company that makes a plastic replica of that same wooden skiff out of planks of PVC , glued together. Goes for a pretty penny too. I wonder if they have simulated wooden floor grates to keep your feet dry from the leaking seams, and rusty coffee cans (real full size 16 oz. ones) to do the deed. I remeber how fun it was, but thinking how much I wish I we had a sailboat. Jerry Moral of story, know what amount of oil is in a 'slug of oil'. I burned up the bearings, and the big six hp sailmaster was history. My Suzuki is 100:1 but I usually use at least 50:1 to be safe; but it's nice to have the hundred to one cushion. And I carefully measure using the guage on the side of the bottle. Jerry PS> And don't wait till the engine dies/freezes up before you change out your impeller. I thru a blade and it blocked the water intake. Froze the engine/or overheated and died, but the suZuki God smiled on my chagrin and gave me another chance. The motor was ok. Also luckily I wasn't going full throttle, but I admit I did give it more gas as the motor bogged down. Yuk! --- On Fri, 2/20/09, Chris h <chris123@magma. ca> wrote: From: Chris h <chris123@magma. ca> Subject: Re: [Cal_Boats] CAL-20 outboard To: Cal_Boats@yahoogrou ps.com Date: Friday, February 20, 2009, 8:40 AM On Friday 20 February 2009 09:13:12 Chris Campbell wrote: > I use the well for aesthetic reasons--there' s no outboard hanging on the > transom. Using a bracket is more efficient because there's no drag for > the outboard that gets used rarely. In our case its different. While you can sail off the mooring most days, the water is thin and the wind is typically in the wrong direction. Mooring field is very tight. So we mostly motor off. Same on re-entry where the winds have changed most evenings and your under bare poles, single handed trying to catch that mooring ring. Always exciting as per your point below. Club house is on the water and the dingy racers are always eyeballing the " keel boaters" and vis versa. So a motor is a requirement. > I made a > new baffle to fit my motor out of truck mudflap rubber with some angle > aluminum at the edges to stiffen it on the periphery. It's held down by > a piece of fiberglass batten stock, about 1-2" or 5-8" wide, tucked > under a little block for that purpose at the top of the well. I like that idea. > My motor is an old 6 hp Evinrude long shaft because that's what was > available on the used market when I needed one. Those 60-70's evinrude's are indestructable. Had one on my last boat. Once they are tuned, bullet proof. Went with the boat however. > The long shaft is > probably overkill. For the well yes, for the transom, no. > My boat is moored in front > of a busy restaurant and the local yacht club, so dumb moves are visible). LOL....yup. Put mine on the rocks in a funcky wind trying to sail onto the mooring. Thats the nice part about the swing keel on the CS22. Start the motor, relax, who cares who's watching, set everything up, pull on the keel light cord, smile politely and bring her around..:) > There's a piece of 2x6 built into the starboard seat locker for securing > the OB down there if you don't want to leave it deployed. That was a > nice touch if you're racing, but then you've got a smelly, drippy OB > sitting in an enclosed space, emitting gas fumes. No...not a good idea at all. I think I will start with the well and if doesnt work out then move to the transom and reinforce it from the inside. But thats work and that's why I got this boat. I have a project boat and want to go sailing this summer. Thanks for your comments. Much appreciated. Nice photo shot as well. -- /ch

Re: [Cal_Boats]Sea skiffs, Indy structural Evinrudes...(CH)

JB2009-02-23 01:21 UTC
Greetings Sailors, Something I read a long time ago that is not intuitively obvious. The more oil you put in the mixture the leaner the engine runs. So more oil means hotter engine. Not the desired result. Probably best to follow the manufacturers recommendations as closely as possible. Best wishes, JB Cal 21 #152 JK Flip Flop ..._/)... Gerald Sobel wrote: > > I > > --- On *Fri, 2/20/09, Gerald Sobel /<so… [at] yahoo.com>/* wrote: > > > From: Gerald Sobel <so… [at] yahoo.com> > Subject: [Cal_Boats] Indy structural Evinrudes...not, waz CAL-20 > outboard(CH) > To: Ca… [at] yahoogroups.com > Date: Friday, February 20, 2009, 2:57 PM > > Indestructable Evinrude..of the 70's and 80's? > Not so, I slopped a slug of oil from the plastic bottle in my gas > in a rush to get the Cal 24 out and to a starting line, and while > running full throttle down the main channel to the breakwater the > engine puttered and died....froze- up!. The bearings were toast, > my mechanic said and it would cost more than the motor was worth > to fix it. > > Ah Ha, now, regarding the fabled Evinrudes, don't get me wrong... > the 1960 Golden Anniversary Evinrude outboard...that's > another...uh..outboard. In my garage is my Dad's (he didn't like > the word Pop...) 51/2 HP Envinrude Fisherman. That motor took > us...the whole family... deep sea fishing out of marinas up and > down the coast of New Jersey, on rented wooden skiffs of all > sorts, and never missed a beat. I had it restored a few years > ago...uh..ten years ago, but since it's a short shaft I've never > gotten to use it. > But thar it is, already to go on another expedition for > flounder...or..halibut as they call them giant man eating flounder > on the west coast. The motor has mixture controls and a > pressurization system, dual fuel lines, and the tank has a built > in priming bulb. Pretty cool. > > Speaking of skiffs, there's a company that makes a plastic replica > of that same wooden skiff out of planks of PVC , glued together. > Goes for a pretty penny too. I wonder if they have simulated > wooden floor grates to keep your feet dry from the leaking seams, > and rusty coffee cans (real full size 16 oz. ones) to do the deed. > > I remeber how fun it was, but thinking how much I wish I we had a > sailboat. > Jerry > > Moral of story, know what amount of oil is in a 'slug of oil'. I > burned up the bearings, and the big six hp sailmaster was history. > > My Suzuki is 100:1 but I usually use at least 50:1 to be safe; but > it's nice to have the hundred to one cushion. And I carefully > measure using the guage on the side of the bottle. > Jerry > PS> And don't wait till the engine dies/freezes up before you > change out your impeller. I thru a blade and it blocked the water > intake. Froze the engine/or overheated and died, but the suZuki > God smiled on my chagrin and gave me another chance. The motor was > ok. Also luckily I wasn't going full throttle, but I admit I did > give it more gas as the motor bogged down. Yuk! > > --- On *Fri, 2/20/09, Chris h /<chris123@magma. ca>/* wrote: > > > From: Chris h <chris123@magma. ca> > Subject: Re: [Cal_Boats] CAL-20 outboard > To: Cal_Boats@yahoogrou ps.com > Date: Friday, February 20, 2009, 8:40 AM > > On Friday 20 February 2009 09:13:12 Chris Campbell wrote: > > > I use the well for aesthetic reasons--there' s no outboard > hanging on the > > transom. Using a bracket is more efficient because there's > no drag for > > the outboard that gets used rarely. > > In our case its different. While you can sail off the mooring > most days, the > water is thin and the wind is typically in the wrong > direction. Mooring field > is very tight. So we mostly motor off. Same on re-entry where > the winds have > changed most evenings and your under bare poles, single handed > trying to > catch that mooring ring. Always exciting as per your point > below. Club house > is on the water and the dingy racers are always eyeballing the > " keel > boaters" and vis versa. So a motor is a requirement. > > > I made a > > new baffle to fit my motor out of truck mudflap rubber with > some angle > > aluminum at the edges to stiffen it on the periphery. It's > held down by > > a piece of fiberglass batten stock, about 1-2" or 5-8" wide, > tucked > > under a little block for that purpose at the top of the well. > > I like that idea. > > > My motor is an old 6 hp Evinrude long shaft because that's > what was > > available on the used market when I needed one. > > Those 60-70's evinrude's are indestructable. Had one on my > last boat. Once > they are tuned, bullet proof. Went with the boat however. > > > The long shaft is > > probably overkill. > > For the well yes, for the transom, no. > > > My boat is moored in front > > of a busy restaurant and the local yacht club, so dumb moves > are visible). > > LOL....yup. Put mine on the rocks in a funcky wind trying to > sail onto the > mooring. Thats the nice part about the swing keel on the CS22. > Start the > motor, relax, who cares who's watching, set everything up, > pull on the keel > light cord, smile politely and bring her around..:) > > > There's a piece of 2x6 built into the starboard seat locker > for securing > > the OB down there if you don't want to leave it deployed. > That was a > > nice touch if you're racing, but then you've got a smelly, > drippy OB > > sitting in an enclosed space, emitting gas fumes. > > No...not a good idea at all. I think I will start with the > well and if doesnt > work out then move to the transom and reinforce it from the > inside. But thats > work and that's why I got this boat. I have a project boat and > want to go > sailing this summer. > > Thanks for your comments. Much appreciated. Nice photo shot as > well. > > -- > /ch > >