Lake Sailor
Active Member
We've done a fair bit of flying when we can, our number of landings remains equal to the number of takeoffs.
Never left one up there yet

We've done a fair bit of flying when we can, our number of landings remains equal to the number of takeoffs.
The only anecdotal experience I have with two cycle engines and how they hold up are the 2-cycle Stihl tools in the un-airconditioned shed. Grass grows 24/7/365 down here so the John Deere mower and all the trimmers, clippers and blower/vacs get run just about every week. I've never fogged any of them and the only maintenance is an occasional air filter change and sharpening blades. Given the choice of fogging or starting an engine, starting would be my choice, and having it start itself regularly would be far and away a first choice. The problem is the to do list gets long around here so squeaky wheels get the attention. When the grass gets too long, believe me I hear squeaking. If the SeaDoo or boat sit another week unattended, ahh, pure silence.
So, something that would start them up once a week without my intervention would be nice. Probably not necessary, but because of other priorities or maybe just laziness, it would probably go a long way in making them last longer or lower maintenance costs/effort to run them once a week. Maybe this only applies to me, but I thought I'd throw out the idea of a generator like auto exercise system in case others are in the same boat, so to speak.
Always a good thing. My neighbor thought he could pick up a few mph by raising the trailing edge on his Bucaneer. It did go about 2.5 mph faster at cruise, but it stalled out 10mph sooner on approach and he dropped a wing and cartwheeled it into the lake. Luckily aside from some bruises, only his pride was injured.
Hair brained idea alert! .... I am thinking of putting preservative oil in a small container and hooking the reserve line from the fuel selector to it. Last ride of the day switch the fuel selector to the small tank and wait for the smoke and the engine to die. Or the switch can be alternated back and forth between oil and the gas. After hibernation for however long, this also gives the engine a good dose of the stuff before gas clears the lines and reaches it and it starts ... maybe at a slight cost of the starter motor's lifespan (someone mentioned about 6 seconds). Not sure if preservative oil sitting in the lines and carbs hurts anything, but if it sits in the engine for extended periods on similar materials and seals, it would seem like a safe bet. No? The other issue I can think of might be more frequent fouling of the plugs.
Dude. You are wayyyy over thinking this. I could get my ski ready to store for 10 years in about 20 minutes the way they say it in the book. No need to reinvent the wheel here. The tried and trued ways of winterizing will keep your ski in great shape. Fog after every ride takes maybe ten seconds of time.
you give me $10 bucks a week I will come start your skis for ya and run for a few min then leave![]()
No doubt, but so far in 18 years, it hasn't happened here yet. People wait in line for the drive through window at many places, especially McDonalds at lunch time, when you can go inside and get your order a lot faster. It's more about convenience than saving time.
Yes but running your engine once a week is not giving you the same benefits as maintaining your craft for periods of non use like the book does. It's not really doing anything for you buy just running it
Not to belabor, but.... Takeoffs are optional, landings are not. There is always a landing of one kind or another![]()
I've got a friend who is a pilot that actually has TWO more take-offs than landings...and has lived to tell about it, lol!
Perhaps he wasn't a believer in fogging!?!?!![]()
Good idea to close the fuel valve. I intend on installing a fogging system of some sort b/c it's difficult climbing down into the bilge vs pushing a knob or plunger.