Fiveslide
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2019
- Messages
- 853
- Display Name
Display name:
Fiveslide
Right there with ya. 1976 Mark Twain 200VBRWe have 33+ years of enjoyment from our boat. View attachment 75865
I'm with you all on the Bayliners, with the exception of that one I posted. I've been on that model and a well cared for example would be a good boat. The engines and outdrives are the same thing that comes in every other manufacturers boats. I've seen plenty of soggy, soft Bayliners that don't deserve a second glance.
I lived on a boat for three years and delivered big boats for a living, I know how to not buy junk.
Doesn’t have a gen on board, but I’m curious from the boat gurus how hard it is to add that as I’m certain it was an option
Not too hard. Just apply money and time. Money to buy it and time to install it. How's your understanding of electrical wiring practices?
I wired my whole garage last summer. I haven’t done any marine specific, but figure that’d be doable to learn.
Also, @Tom-D I would like a sail boat one day, but it doesn’t fit the mission for now.
I think you will find that you will rarely run the genset and AC while on the water. If you are at anchor, it's annoying, if you are under way you don't really need it. We have an AC on the fireboat. It's an enclosed pilothouse aluminum hull and can get toasty while at the dock. But thats the only time the AC gets run, once the boat gets moving you just slide open the windows (heat otoh is essential for fall and winter operations).
We did some more browsing last night and expanded the search radius (looking on boat trader) mainly to look at more layouts and add what there was. Few thoughts:
- it seems that the mid to late 90s were when they really got the layouts figured out in a way that’s ideal to us
-29-31 ft seems to be where they get the layouts right for the cabin and the deck, which makes sense since then you have enough length for both
- they also don’t have many in that are twins with AC and generator
There’s an early 90s Sea Ray Sundancer 310 that’s local to me that I’m interested in looking at. 31’, twin 350s, AC, includes trailer. Doesn’t have a gen on board, but I’m curious from the boat gurus how hard it is to add that as I’m certain it was an option. The deck layout in those days was pretty weird but after looking at some others it also looks like I could make a couple minor changes and get it close to the newer ones.
Mostly it’s close by and hits most of the marks so it would be worth checking out I think.
ABYC standards for boat electrical systems is one of the few standards you can find on the line and not have to be a member to get. Good thing to stick to, not required by insurance companies yet, but may as well wire it to some standard rather than nothing.
Well, it depends on what you expect to do with the cabin while at anchor. 100-degrees in an enclosed space often with little airflow makes it pretty miserable. If they actually intend on using the cabin much, I’d imagine you’d want it cooled off. However, with decent Bimini tips/enclosures most people will prefer to be in the cockpit area where they are in the shade but get a nice breeze. The cabin is better for cat naps, letting a brief rain storm pass, or using the head (which as an owner has its drawbacks as well for pump out).
Yeah but they’ve got three little kids so an area to get the kid out of the heat/sun could really help
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Some of those Sea Rays you have to pull a motor to get a generator in/out. Not the end of the world, but something to consider.
Transom rot is something to look for in this range of boats. Tap around the transom with the handle of a screwdriver, you want to hear a nice solid sound not a dead hollow thump. Do this around and below the transom housing for each drive. A bad problem will be easily noticed even with no experience doing this.
No matter how good a deal you find, nothing with OMC stringer mount drives, although they should not be on a boat later than 88 or 89. I believe they quit making them in 87 but some manufacturers had quite a few on hand so they found there way onto a few years after that.
Bravo drives of that age need to be looked at where the upper steering shaft goes thru the gimbal ring, play between the two is expensive.
James
You will sink cash into I, no matter who you have do what.Those are neat ideas, Tom, but still not quite what I think we'd go with. Plus while I'm not afraid of a project we'd rather have something that has the fit and finish nice and done by someone else. Would rather buy something that needs an engine or an outdrive, etc.
I believe the future in family boats is here:
http://www.svendsenmarine.com/5_30_sport_fishing_boat
These can be adapted to almost any configuration.
You'd be hard pressed to find a used one in your budget.
We see more and more of these in south east used as water taxi, and private cargo delivery,
http://www.svendsenmarine.com/2016-_42_landing_craft#Next
This type of boat is extensively use for the tourist fishing in Alaska.Those aluminum boats with the full pilothouse are not particularly popular for recreational use anywhere it gets hot and muggy. You'll see them anywhere year around operation with a purpose (commercial, government) is needed.
This is the only boat I skipper around when they let me:
That sucker is heavy (welded hull, fire-pump, plumbing), sits on a triple axle goose-neck and would require a CDL to pull around. Not all that fast, but equipped to go out in all kinds of weather.
Actually no, years gone by when the manufacturer had to pay welders by the hour, yes, but not today. Now we have robot welders that will do the work perfect every time at 100 times the speed. I get my aluminum plate from a boat builder in Bayview WA. they now build a 40 foot gill netter in a week.Don't get me wrong, people have done some amazing things with trawler-style boats and aluminum/steel hulled vessels, but they are generally still very utilitarian. If I were dealing with water/weather conditions in the Pacific NW or NE/Northern Great Lakes, I'd consider something more utilitarian that would be up to the task. I doubt most people are going to give up fiberglass/gelcoat when it comes to consumer boating. There's no real convincing reason to do so when considering boats under 50', since fiberglass boats are cheaper to manufacture due to the ease of repeat-ability in the mold process and ability to have more complex mold forms with fiberglass layups. Having various curves and molded-in features is time-consuming and tedious work with rigid materials like steel/aluminum.
Wife rules, !I can tell you that trawler/utilitarian is NOT what my wife wants.
Actually no, years gone by when the manufacturer had to pay welders by the hour, yes, but not today. Now we have robot welders that will do the work perfect every time at 100 times the speed. I get my aluminum plate from a boat builder in Bayview WA. they now build a 40 foot gill netter in a week.
No EPA or haz-mat worries either.