David Hughes
Senior Member
Well I’ll be damned. There are a few gassers that fit the bill, in Chicago, in Michigan, in Tennessee, etc. I guess I’m more used to ocean boats where gas would be very odd...
Well I’ll be damned. There are a few gassers that fit the bill, in Chicago, in Michigan, in Tennessee, etc. I guess I’m more used to ocean boats where gas would be very odd...
I guess the biggest thing for me was fuel economy. My Wellcraft has Volvo 7.4 GI and cruising at 18 knots burns about 40gph. I know I could cruise slower but not being on plane the ride isn’t great. It’s nice to cruise faster but wish I could go at least 10-15 knots with decent fuel economy.
Thanks Jim
I have a private dock. State owns the bank and land under the dock. It's a lease. Costs about $4800/year taxes and insurance. Cheap compared to a marina, but simple. MY boat would be $1000/month. Hull speed and the Detroits were why I picked my current boat.Lepke,
Length is golden indeed.
My short boat is limited to 6.25 knots.
How do you afford moorage for these big boats?
For any boat there is a "hull speed" beyond which fuel consumption goes up exponentially. Trawlers are designed with displacement or semi-Displacement hulls. They are designed to efficiently move through the water. Most cannot plane at all, but if they do, fuel consumption goes through the roof. Hull speed is 1.3 times the square root of the WATERLINE length. That formula applies to everything from a 16 ft runabout to an ocean liner. I have a Helmsman 38 with a 5.9 liter turbocharged Cummins diesel rated @ 380 HP. At hull speed of about 7 KTS it burns less than 3 gallons per hour at 1600 RPM. If I run it at 2800 RPM, I get up to about 12 KTS and fuel burn goes to 18 GPH! And the boat has hasn't ever planed, but it does produce one "helluva" wake. Needless to say, unless I'm in an unusually strong current or getting out of the way of a tug or oil tanker, I cruise at 7 KTS. Other than that, i might have to run up to 1900-200 RPM and 6 GPM to maintain my 7 KTS water speed in strong headwinds and seas. An old friend was complaining that it would take him an hour in his 30 KT fishing boat to get to where he wanted to fish. I told him it would take me half a day to get there. You know what he said? "Yeah Paul, but you're where you want to be as soon as you're out of the breakwater" it's about the journey as much as the destination. [emoji924][emoji924][emoji196]Keith
Thanks. The only reason I mentioned things other than the hull was due to reading other posts were guys asked about purchasing a boat and then being asked for more info.
I appreciate your advice. I agree that 6 adults would be too much but was looking at traveling across Lake Michigan and docking at Harbor but staying in local hotel. I have 2 sons, one married with second child on the way and the other son is serious with current but you never know how that goes.
Thanks again
Jim
I think the early 80s reference must be when vinylester resins became more common and blisters ceased to be a major concern. Not sure I’d make that a big deal - 70s Hatterases are very durable for example.
My recommendation is do what I did. Buy a mid 80's boat with nice bones that is useable and then take the next few years to refit and bring it up to standards of what you want, spending as you go and can afford. That gives you the added benefit of saving on the front end and then figuring out what you really want/need as you go. Good luck.
An old friend was complaining that it would take him an hour in his 30 KT fishing boat to get to where he wanted to fish. I told him it would take me half a day to get there. You know what he said? "Yeah Paul, but you're where you want to be as soon as you're out of the breakwater" it's about the journey as much as the destination. [emoji924][emoji924][emoji196]
60K budget for a 40' plus trawler type boat. Get ready to be disappointed. JMO.
Jimmy
take a look at mid 80's Bayliner 4588. Twin diesels, 3 staterooms, pilot house, lots of room. there are several on Yachtworld in the $79k - $100k range. I've been on a lot of these over the years and they are really nice boats.
John
John
I did look at a couple of them. I have heard good things and bad but that is with any boat and anyones opinion. What is your thought on the Bayliner line itself? I have heard the hulls have had issues along with the runners. I just read a forum discussion on the Bayliner 4588 on this forum. Here is the link: http://www.trawlerforum.com/forums/s3/bayliner-4588-a-11530.html
I am a little less worried about the boat itself, so I just need to look at ones that have been well taken care of.
Thanks
Jimmy
Jimmy
take a look at mid 80's Bayliner 4588. Twin diesels, 3 staterooms, pilot house, lots of room. there are several on Yachtworld in the $79k - $100k range. I've been on a lot of these over the years and they are really nice boats.
John
Avoid that boat at all costs. There is a very good reason you can buy the bayliners so cheap. Bayliner uses the cheapest of the cheapest on every system. Interior and exterior. The newer the boat, the worst they are.
smitty477,
We’ve been through this before.
All of our experiences are small compared to whats out there. It’s a big world. You’re stand is like the mom that says “how many kids have you had” and if you say “not any muself .... “ she’ll junp on you say you aren’t qualified to speak of kids and don’t know anything. But people w kids share willingly and there’s lots of parents out there.
The short of it is that one can learn a great deal about a great many things by listening and reading. Re Bayliners the good/bad and opinions flow freely.
And there’s the element of big volume manufacturing benefits that small builders don’t have. And there’s no doubt if you build lots of one thing you can get really good at it.
Wev’ve heard it all before. At least those that have been around. Bashing Bayliners gets popular because the bashers seem to be everybody and it’s easy to jump on the bandwagon and have little risk getting tomatoes or eggs on self. Look back in TF and you’ll find most of us came to the conclusion that Bayliners were good boats.
One prominent feature found on high volume boats is the lack of custom boat features. The’ve got to appeal to most all people or the big volume just won’t happen. BMW will never be a Ford or Honda.