My Merrymeeting Bay Gunning Float came with a 4 horse power 1974 Johnson Outboard. The engine ran when I bought the boat last fall. I now want to test the engine and it's functions before I push off on my first voyage.
I am a novice trying to return back to his roots -as it were.
I do not want to find myself pushing off on a loading ramp in the marina with a boat and engine, new to me, with only a sculling oar (which I still have to teach myself how to use) as my only means of propulsion should the engine or my inexperience place me in such a predicament.
Does anyone have a recommendation for a safe and reasonable way for doing a test at home in a garage? My boat is on it's trailer and I can attach the engine to the transom and stick it in a plastic trash can. Is that a good idea? Is there a better idea? Is it safe to run the engine through it's motions this way?
When I was a boy, my father and uncle would test outboard engines using a 50 gallon drum. I don't have a 50 gallon drum and I can't get one for engine testing.
I am particularly concerned about testing the engine's operation because when I was a boy (12 or 13), my brother (8 or 9) and I found ourselves out on a bay on Long Island using a failed engine as a rudder on the tide to get us back toward the fishing station.
Thanks in advance for any "constructive" input.
Werner
P.S. It has been awhile since I have posted here because someone responded to one of my posts that there was nothing economical or reasonable about duck hunting. I did not to tell the poster then that I only paid $800 for the boat, engine, and trailer.
I am a novice trying to return back to his roots -as it were.
I do not want to find myself pushing off on a loading ramp in the marina with a boat and engine, new to me, with only a sculling oar (which I still have to teach myself how to use) as my only means of propulsion should the engine or my inexperience place me in such a predicament.
Does anyone have a recommendation for a safe and reasonable way for doing a test at home in a garage? My boat is on it's trailer and I can attach the engine to the transom and stick it in a plastic trash can. Is that a good idea? Is there a better idea? Is it safe to run the engine through it's motions this way?
When I was a boy, my father and uncle would test outboard engines using a 50 gallon drum. I don't have a 50 gallon drum and I can't get one for engine testing.
I am particularly concerned about testing the engine's operation because when I was a boy (12 or 13), my brother (8 or 9) and I found ourselves out on a bay on Long Island using a failed engine as a rudder on the tide to get us back toward the fishing station.
Thanks in advance for any "constructive" input.
Werner
P.S. It has been awhile since I have posted here because someone responded to one of my posts that there was nothing economical or reasonable about duck hunting. I did not to tell the poster then that I only paid $800 for the boat, engine, and trailer.