That is fantastic! Thanks for the post, Paul. I am a bike mechanic at REI in Seattle and now I am thinking I need to fabricate something with a bike crank, a chain, a prop... I should probably just overhaul my outboard! Is IS a very intriguing idea though. Hmmmmm... -Rusty --- Paul Bailey <pbailey@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
I'm pretty sure I've found a picture and description of the hand powered outboard. Go to : http://www.acbm.us/passion-for-outboards.htm
and scroll down to about the third picture.....Hmmm.... this one has a crank, it looks like, and not a 'pump handle' tiller: there surely could have been more than one such thing.
-Paul Bailey M-15 Sassea
On Thursday, October 30, 2003, at 08:40 PM, montgomery_boats- request@mailman.xmission.com wrote:
-----Original Message----- From: IDCLLC@aol.com [mailto:IDCLLC@aol.com] Sent: Thursday, October 30, 2003 5:52 AM To: montgomery_boats@mailman.xmission.com Subject: Re: M_Boats: Yet another method of
propulsion
My dad has a manual outboard engine-essentially a
gearbox on a shaft,
with a big, slow turning prop. You pump its tiller up and down to make it go. It's over thirty years old, and I've never used it, but it fascinated me as a child. It's very light; even an 8 year old can pick it up. If I get a chance, I'll try it on our P-15, but beware: I'm building Michalak's 14 ft Piragua canoe, which is taking all my boating time. The good news is, I have about two more coats of epoxy and painting to complete it. Wahoo!
Cheers
Steve Tyree, P-15 #2098 "Amy Ann" --
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