"The Queen" powered by the ' 53 Scott Atwater |
The other day, I took my little outboard out of storage, the one I use to
power my little folding boat. It’s a 1993 Yamaha 3hp that I bought new in
Buffalo. While it has served me well for 23 years, of late, it has become a
little unreliable. I placed it on my little folding boat for my spring
shakedown cruise, I put some fresh gas in it, fired it up, and it seemed to be
running well. Then, I decided to take a putt down the nearby Magnetewan River,
and after several miles of driving, I stopped to top off the gas tank for the
ride home. As I unscrewed the cap on the fuel tank, which is attached to the
motor, it broke off in my hand. Upon closer examination, I discovered that the plastic
internal gas tank was decomposing, and now I had no way to tighten a gas cap to
the motor. I figured I’d putt home on the gas left in the tank and then see if
I could order a new tank to fix the problem. I pulled the starter cord and the motor sputtered
and conked out. I pulled again and again, tried the choke, but nothing worked. Although
there was still enough gas in the tank, the motor was now dead, and there I was
slowly drifting down the Magnetewan River. I began to row the three miles home
when a neighbor passed and offered me a tow. When I returned home, I ordered a
new tank, for which shipping and customs cost almost as much as the tank (free
trade my ass), but then I started thinking about the long hours I had put on
that little motor. Short of replacing every wearing part on the motor, I could
never be assured that some other part was not going to give out. I decided it
was time to take the rubber band off and buy a new, more reliable motor. I now
own a new Suzuki 2.5 HP outboard, which I purchased from our local marina. I downsized the power because I’m getting
older. Summers are too short to be screwing around with unreliable outboard
motors, and after 23 years of faithful service, it was time to say farewell to the old Yamaha. My plumber and bluegrass mentor is a whiz with small engines, so I offered him the old motor
(with the replacement tank) in return for future services. Good karma.
I have had pretty good luck with most of my vehicles and motors over the
years, but I’ve made my share of bad purchases. I’ve only had one REALLY bad car,
and one terrible outboard motor. The car was a 1985 Volkswagen Jetta, and it was
the exact opposite of my beloved 1971 VW Beetle. Within a week of the expiration
of its two year warranty, that Jetta began to self-destruct. Expensive parts
failed, one after the other, and I got used to my German mechanic saying “Misser
Oppenheimer, Ve gotta big prublem”. During my antique boat phase in the 80s, I
purchased a 1953 5 HP Scott Atwater “Bail-O-Matic” outboard motor. I kid you
not, that’s what it was called! I was never sure why ... were you supposed
to use the motor to bail out your leaky boat? That motor was a piece of crap.
It was the heaviest 5hp outboard motor I have ever lifted, required at least
twenty pulls to start, and on the rare occasions when it did run, it spat oil, and made enough noise to wake the dead. It
was interesting to look at – very 50s – but that is not a good reason to buy an
outboard motor. My friends used to sit on the shore and laugh at me as I tried
to start that confounded motor. They’d count the pulls out loud. “Thirty-three,
thirty-four, thirty-five …!” It was humiliating. I eventually made it into a floor lamp, for which it seemed infinitely better suited.
The big story this week was that prize fighter Muhammad Ali passed away. Last night on
60 Minutes, they played a clip of an old Ali interview with Ben Bradley, and I
remember seeing the entire interview when it aired. It made me sad to think that they are both gone now.. Ali was such a remarkable human being, and a symbol for what was good about Americans. A friend
posted on Facebook the other day, and I agree with his sentiments. He felt that, while the 60’s
were turbulent times, there was a sense of idealism, and the feeling that
activism could and would change things for the better. These days I’m not as
hopeful, and I don't think I'm alone. While I don’t see Donald Trump as the real problem Americans face, his
popularity is a shot across the bow of the ship of state. I think that ship
has sprung a leak.
Might be time to resurrect the Bail-O-Matic.
-Written by Jamie
Oppenheimer c 2016 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
1 comment:
I thought it got the deep 6?
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