Good information! -----Original Message----- From: montgomery_boats-bounces+jaytownley=alamedanet.net@mailman.xmission.com [mailto:montgomery_boats-bounces+jaytownley=alamedanet.net@mailman.xmission. com] On Behalf Of William Sylvester Sent: Sunday, October 29, 2006 12:39 PM To: For and about Montgomery Sailboats Subject: Re: M_Boats: Honda 2 HP for M17? Jay, The question of the suitability of the Honda 2hp and the M-17 has been an off and on subject of this forum for a number of years. Many of us think it is too small for more "strenuous" situations, others feel it is good for most situations. I posted the following back in 2005 and have yet to have an experience when the little Honda was not able to do the job. Bill Sylvester M-17 #279 Endelig m:montgomery_boats@mailman.xmission.com 15 September 2005 . 9:37AM +0800 Re: M_Boats: Tiny Honda Vs. M-17 by gmhyde1 Reply to author Reply to group Theoretical hull speed for a displacement hull is 1.34 * square root of waterline length, which, for the M17 is 1.34* sq rt (15.833') = 5.33 knots. Having said this, I plan to try my Honda 2 on my M17 when I get it. --Gary Hyde N24 'Sailabration' M17 #637 'Hydeaway2' M15 #235 'Vanilla' On Sep 14, 2005, at 1:33 PM, William Sylvester wrote:
I have been wanting to give my opinion of the Honda, long shaft, 4 stroke, 2hp, pushing an M-17 since the discussion on outboards last year. I was pretty well convinced that I had made a mistake using this setup. I liked the idea of a light motor, quiet, air cooled, and economical on gas. I also liked how it fit neatly into the stock cutout in the transom. It does not take up any room in the cockpit at all. Even though we have taken many trips with the tiny motor, we have never had to give it any test of pushing power. Yesterday we took a nice sail on a local lake. The wind was about 5 to 8 kts and we had a great morning and sailed downwind the five or so miles to the end of the lake and had lunch. After lunch we started back and the wind picked up to 20+ kts (as measured by my hand held gauge) lots of whitecaps and an exciting sail. After a couple of tacks, we decided progress was too slow and we would motor back to the launch ramp. As I went to start the little motor, I could hear you guys whispering in my ear. "Bill, you should have got the 4hp." We pointed into the wind with the motor at a fast idle and lowered and secured the flapping sails. We headed straight into the wind and chop and I sweated as moved the throttle to "slow" (just below the start mark). I watched the GPS for our overground speed and in a couple of minutes it was reading 4.5mph. I left the throttle on slow and we maintained that speed for the 4 miles+ back to the ramp. Comfortable and relatively dry trip. Used about a cup of gas. I am becoming more confident of this tiny motor. I know it won't fight the tides in the San Juans, but it will easily push the boat at hull speed, and with any luck we would make it.
Bill and Darcy Sylvester M-17, #279 Endelig
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_______________________________________________ http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/montgomery_boats ____________________________ William Sylvester wmcsyl1@cox.net _______________________________________________ http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/montgomery_boats