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#1
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Better Outboards?
I'm about to order a 5HP outboard to go with my new 10' Porta-bote. Anyone have
any real info on which 5HP 4 cycle outboard is best currently? Thanks, RB |
#2
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I'm about to order a 5HP outboard to go with my new 10' Porta-bote. Anyone
have any real info on which 5HP 4 cycle outboard is best currently? Thanks, RB When you find out, please let me know. I will be needing something similar by spring. A few folks have emailed me to say that nearly all new outboards (major brands) are pretty good. I was hoping for some info beyond that. Most people around City Island suggest the new Nissan's, but without much techie stuff to back it up. RB |
#3
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A few folks have emailed me to say that nearly all new outboards (major
brands) are pretty good. I was hoping for some info beyond that. Most people around City Island suggest the new Nissan's, but without much techie stuff to back it up. If you look close at the Nissan, Tohatsu, and Mercury, they are all the same engine except for the paint. I am thinking there are one or two more that should be in that list also. We bought the Nissan 2 stroke 3.5 a few years ago as it was a bit lighter to handle off the stern rail and down into the inflatable than the 4 stroke.. It was also the smallest with the neutral/forward on it. It has been as good as our previous motor was a 10 year old 2.5 Nissan, that when it started, you had better be pointed in the right direction as it was in gear all the time. Leanne s/v Fundy |
#5
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When you find out, please let me know. I will be needing something
similar by spring. BB Me, too! How about a chainsaw attachment? Some safety equipment place, wasn't it? Same place sold fire hose adapters and anti sink bladders for seadoos, non? Terry K If anyone knows of a good deal on Prozac or Lithium, please forward the information to poor Terry K. BB I think he's referring to the common Porta-Bote tricker's hack of using a weedeater head end driving a trolling motor bottom. A chain saw motor might get more horses into the act. That's because the PBs can be driven with ridiculously low horsepower. Lotsa not-needing-to-plane folks use simple trolling motors to propel when not rowing... L8R Skip, not yet an owner, but studying, as is my wont -- Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig http://tinyurl.com/384p2 "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain |
#6
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Bobsprit wrote:
I'm about to order a 5HP outboard to go with my new 10' Porta-bote. Anyone have any real info on which 5HP 4 cycle outboard is best currently? Thanks, RB I bought a 5 hp "Johnson" two years ago at the Newport Boat Show. Although I wanted to buy "American" it was not possible. Virtually all the outboards in that size range are built by Nissan. Pull the cowls off and the engines are all the same. You pretty much decide on the color scheme that fits your mood, and the day's price. FWIW the motor is great. Starts every time. I make sure to run the carb dry after every weekend's use. Jonathan -- I am building a Dudley Dix, Argie 10, for my daughter. Check it out: http://home.comcast.net/~jonsailr |
#7
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Actually, I believe they are all built by Tohatsu. If you have a local
dealer, save money by buying one. If you have a good Nissan dealer, pay a little more, but enjoy the more complete dealer & parts network. Good motors. surfnturf I bought a 5 hp "Johnson" two years ago at the Newport Boat Show. Although I wanted to buy "American" it was not possible. Virtually all the outboards in that size range are built by Nissan. Pull the cowls off and the engines are all the same. You pretty much decide on the color scheme that fits your mood, and the day's price. FWIW the motor is great. Starts every time. I make sure to run the carb dry after every weekend's use. Jonathan -- I am building a Dudley Dix, Argie 10, for my daughter. Check it out: http://home.comcast.net/~jonsailr |
#8
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"Leanne" wrote in message ...
If you look close at the Nissan, Tohatsu, and Mercury, they are all the same engine except for the paint. I am thinking there are one or two more that should be in that list also. We bought the Nissan 2 stroke 3.5 a few years ago as it was a bit lighter to handle off the stern rail and down into the inflatable than the 4 stroke.. It was also the smallest with the neutral/forward on it. It has been as good as our previous motor was a 10 year old 2.5 Nissan, that when it started, you had better be pointed in the right direction as it was in gear all the time. It gets even better: the usual 2hp Nissan (or other name/same) is the same motor as the 3.5 - if you can live without the neutral & are on short money, yank the little aluminum restrictor plate out of its carb & you have an instant 3.5 HP. My little 7-1/2' inflatable dinghy gets up on plane with one & goes like a raped ape, maybe 18-20 mph (with a 2-bladed alum prop subbed & only me aboard). It always starts by the 3rd pull on last year's gas with no stabilizer. I've had it for 12 years. The slightly lower weight of the shiftless motor is a Godsend for getting it off the sternrail & onto the dingy in unfriendly seas. These are also very reliable little motors. Mine gets a lot of neglect & is almost never laid up properly, though somehow I take care of everything else I own. A weak point is their plastic fuel tank tends to crack/leak below the filler fitting & costs $$ for what it is. There is, or was, an accessory alternator (lighting coil) available that bolts right up to the flywheel - I have one that took somedoing to find in the US. |
#9
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Bobsprit wrote:
I'm about to order a 5HP outboard to go with my new 10' Porta-bote. Anyone have any real info on which 5HP 4 cycle outboard is best currently? 4 stroke will be unavoidable nowadays, but the overstrained back from lugging a too heavy outboard is not. Why on earth do you think you need 5 hp for a floppy 10' boat? A 2.5 horse Honda will be a lot easier on your back. The cost about GBP 400 / EUR 650. -- vriendelijke groeten/kind regards, Jelle begin replace-outlook-please.exe |
#10
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I have a 8' Portaboat and a friend of mine has a Honda 2 HP 4 stroke outboard.
We got together one weekend and found that the Portaboat would *almost* get up on a plane with one passenger and that motor. Maybe with a tiller extension and weight further forward, it would. For me, that is the motor to get for our Portaboat. Light, simple, strong enough to go upwind/current where I could not row. It is air-cooled (simple) and has a Centrifical Clutch so you can slow to a stop without killing the motor. The tank is integrated (both good and bad points about that) so for reverse, you spin the motor around (and flip the tiller over the top). Slick. I had a 5 HP Honda for 4 years. Never had a problem with it. I'd recommend them from my personal experience, which is not something I would say about the Yamaha 9.9 high thrust motors.... -=O=- Randy Devol F/C-31 #213, Joint Venture On Tue, 21 Sep 2004, Jelle wrote: Bobsprit wrote: I'm about to order a 5HP outboard to go with my new 10' Porta-bote. Anyone have any real info on which 5HP 4 cycle outboard is best currently? 4 stroke will be unavoidable nowadays, but the overstrained back from lugging a too heavy outboard is not. Why on earth do you think you need 5 hp for a floppy 10' boat? A 2.5 horse Honda will be a lot easier on your back. The cost about GBP 400 / EUR 650. -- vriendelijke groeten/kind regards, Jelle begin replace-outlook-please.exe |
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