Cruising in boats





transporting an outboard engine by car

My wife and I will be traveling to various harbors in Maine by car
this weekend with our inflatable dingy (deflated) and an old 2-horse
power outboard engine. We will arrive somewhere, inflate the boat and
spend a few hours cruising. It is a great way for us to see some
beautiful places in a very short amount of time. The outboard is so
old that it must be kept straight up or it tends to leak. My question
is: any ideas on how to travel by car with an old outboard engine? In
the past the car has smelled of gas.

posted by admin in Uncategorized and have Comments (5)






5 Responses to “transporting an outboard engine by car”

  1. admin says:

    "richard" <rmalc…@bostonconservatory.edu> wrote in message

    news:1184844906.093067.99470@n60g2000hse.googlegroups.com…

    > My wife and I will be traveling to various harbors in Maine by car
    > this weekend with our inflatable dingy (deflated) and an old 2-horse
    > power outboard engine. We will arrive somewhere, inflate the boat and
    > spend a few hours cruising. It is a great way for us to see some
    > beautiful places in a very short amount of time. The outboard is so
    > old that it must be kept straight up or it tends to leak. My question
    > is: any ideas on how to travel by car with an old outboard engine? In
    > the past the car has smelled of gas.

    Why don’t you stick it on one of those bike carriers that you attach to the
    tow bar?  Ought to be strong enough.

  2. admin says:

    "richard" <rmalc…@bostonconservatory.edu> wrote in message

    news:1184844906.093067.99470@n60g2000hse.googlegroups.com…

    > My wife and I will be traveling to various harbors in Maine by car
    > this weekend with our inflatable dingy (deflated) and an old 2-horse
    > power outboard engine. We will arrive somewhere, inflate the boat and
    > spend a few hours cruising. It is a great way for us to see some
    > beautiful places in a very short amount of time. The outboard is so
    > old that it must be kept straight up or it tends to leak. My question
    > is: any ideas on how to travel by car with an old outboard engine? In
    > the past the car has smelled of gas.

    If you had a receiver type trailer hitch, you could have a bracket made to
    come
    up at right angle, similar to the kind of attachment made for transporting
    motorized wheel chairs, and then have a pad for attaching the motor. No
    fumes
    as it is riding straight up and outside of the car. If anyone looks like
    they have
    a question, you can always say that is the get home engine when the car runs
    out of gas.

    Leanne

    s/v Fundy

  3. admin says:

    On Jul 19, 7:35 am, richard <rmalc…@bostonconservatory.edu> wrote:

    > My wife and I will be traveling to various harbors in Maine by car
    > this weekend with our inflatable dingy (deflated) and an old 2-horse
    > power outboard engine. We will arrive somewhere, inflate the boat and
    > spend a few hours cruising. It is a great way for us to see some
    > beautiful places in a very short amount of time. The outboard is so
    > old that it must be kept straight up or it tends to leak. My question
    > is: any ideas on how to travel by car with an old outboard engine? In
    > the past the car has smelled of gas.

    What a fun trip you have planned and economical way to "cruise"!   If
    nothing else you could just add enough gas to putter around then run
    it dry prior to storing it in the trunk.  Try storing it with the
    carb. side up.

  4. admin says:

    roger wrote:
    > On Jul 19, 7:35 am, richard <rmalc…@bostonconservatory.edu> wrote:
    > > My wife and I will be traveling to various harbors in Maine by car
    > > this weekend with our inflatable dingy (deflated) and an old 2-horse
    > > power outboard engine. We will arrive somewhere, inflate the boat and
    > > spend a few hours cruising. It is a great way for us to see some
    > > beautiful places in a very short amount of time. The outboard is so
    > > old that it must be kept straight up or it tends to leak. My question
    > > is: any ideas on how to travel by car with an old outboard engine? In
    > > the past the car has smelled of gas.

    > What a fun trip you have planned and economical way to "cruise"!   If
    > nothing else you could just add enough gas to putter around then run
    > it dry prior to storing it in the trunk.  Try storing it with the
    > carb. side up.

        I would add storing it with the engine head higher than the gear box.
    Otherwise,
        you can have residual water drain from the gear box into your cylinders and
        eventually rusting them in place.

                                                Sherwin

  5. admin says:

    Put it standing upright behind the passenger’s seat, and tie it to the
    the headrest of the passenger seat so that it can’t fall over. Worked
    like a charm with mine.
    (Or replace the gaskets of the filler cap and of the air vent in the
    filler cap.)

    On Jul 19, 4:35 am, richard <rmalc…@bostonconservatory.edu> wrote:

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    > My wife and I will be traveling to various harbors in Maine by car
    > this weekend with our inflatable dingy (deflated) and an old 2-horse
    > power outboard engine. We will arrive somewhere, inflate the boat and
    > spend a few hours cruising. It is a great way for us to see some
    > beautiful places in a very short amount of time. The outboard is so
    > old that it must be kept straight up or it tends to leak. My question
    > is: any ideas on how to travel by car with an old outboard engine? In
    > the past the car has smelled of gas.