The obstinate iron donkey

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The Stuart Turner 2-stroke petrol engine bred a generation of very good sailors

Mad about the boat

Dave Selby is the proud owner of a 5.48m (18ft) Sailfish, which he keeps on a swinging mooring on the picturesque Blackwater estuary in Essex

“I’ve always wanted to see an original Turner!”
Claudia Myatt

Naysayers, sceptics and cynics are cruelly and unnecessarily disparaging about Stuart Turners, but I won’t hear a word said against them. First though, for the benefit of South Coast sailors, and in fact sailors in general, as well as anyone born after the relief of Mafeking and still living I should explain what a Stuart Turner is, and what it does.

In lay-folk terms, and without being overly technical, Stuart Turners were what they used to install in yachts in the olden days before boatbuilders realised you could put engines in the void under the cockpit. And when I bought my 1953 Blackwater Sloop it too came with a Stuart Turner.

Better yet, it was installed not in the boat but in a garden shed in Brightlingsea, thus allowing me to use the cavity under the cockpit sole for its original purpose as a cellar for storing lager, Fray Bentos steak and kidney pies, boarding ladders, sun loungers and out-of-date distressed flares, which should only ever be worn in an emergency–or possibly ironically.

Even better, my 8hp Stuart Turner petrol 2-stroke had been restored to ‘museum quality’, which is another irony as museums are where Stuart Turners are most commonly encountered, usually in the dinosaur room alongside the sundry flint axes and cudgels that are part of the service kit and essential for fine-tuning adjustments of the points, as well as stopping the engine in the unlikely event that hitting it actually got it going in the first place. And with restoration receipts amounting to considerably more than I paid for the boat, I reckoned I was quids in, as the gleaming green Stuart also came in a wooden crate and on a palette that would provide a winter’s worth of kindling.

All in all, I couldn’t believe my luck, but it only got better, because Snipe of Maldon also came with a nearly new 4hp Mariner outboard, which though it starts and makes noises and whisks the water with a propeller that goes round and round, has nothing of the charm and character which we Stuart Turner acolytes so appreciate. Indeed, a sweet-running Stuart Turner is remarkably quiet, and economical too. And a non-running Stuart Turner is even quieter and even more frugal on fuel.

But I’m not the only fan of Stuart Turners. The 8hp that came with my 1953 3½-tonner was probably fitted when new, and my mate Tommy tells me that when his father

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