The fact it weighs just 12kg helps here too. Unusually, motor speed, and indeed the ability to shift between forward and reverse, is controlled by two buttons on the top of the rudder rather than by the tiller (normally via a twist grip) – as is traditional.
That may seem less ergonomically sound, but Remigo says it was “an outco*e of many extensive tests with users” (using a custom-made boat steering simulator and test rides).
It certainly makes sense: tap the button toward the front of the unit to increase speed forward, tap the rear button to decrease speed until you reach zero, at which point continuing to tap will start the motor going slowly backwards and gradually increase speed as you keep tapping. Pressing both buttons together kills the motor at any speed (as does the magnetic kill cord).
It’s certainly preferable to forgetting which way to twist the throttle to speed up or slow down, which can be exciting when you’re in close proximity to other boats (yes, I’ve been there…).
Remigo says it should have about 14 miles of range at 3 knots on a typical tender (at maximum speed, about 5 knots, expect an hour of run time, so 5nm). A standard AC wall socket will recharge it in 6 hours.
Weight: 12kg
Power: 1Kw
Battery: 1,085Wh
Top speed: 5 knots
Range: 14nm @ 3 knots*
Price: £2,185
*Our estimated range figures in the video assumed 50% power consumption at 50% of top speed. Remigo have clarified that the unit only uses 30% of power at 50% of top speed, hence the higher range figures quoted here.
This article Remigo One review: Small but powerful electric outboard tested appeared first on Motor Boat & Yachting.
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