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Bozeman Bob

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Everything posted by Bozeman Bob

  1. I would be looking in the 20-22' range if moving up from 16'.... Handles O a lot better, ton more of room and will take care of the 2 footisis for awhile. Just as easy to move around and will hold resale value [ new or used ] down the line. If I couldn't afford a new one in that size I would spend whatever I had budgeted for the new 18 .
  2. Way to much water coming in that quickly that the Captain couldn't retrieve his life preserver and get out of the cabin. You could have a ripped bellows, through hull fittings leaking, drain plug open and it still should take 15-minutes after you notice the water before it went down. I have had boats with bad bellows and no way with the drives shaft and gimbal bearing in the way is that amount of water going to enter the boat. I would guess they either hit something on plane or the transom was so rotted that the out drive fell off ,either from impact or the transom just gave out.
  3. Just about any shut off valve that is not made of steel will work on your thru hull fittings Not sure exactly how your fittings were leaking ,were they cracked or was it the hose that fits onto the fitting that was leaking ? I believe you have a solid glass hull so there wouldn't be any water intrusion into the hull. At any rate a check valve will stop the water at the fitting and that is the route I would take before plugging any though hull fittings. The less water in "the belly" of the boat the better ,especially when you have a 35 year old boat with wood encapsulated stringers, At some point you have to trust your equipment ,know your safety routine and enjoy yourself out there, otherwise you would never leave the dock.
  4. Any decently built boat that has below waterline fittings will have check valves within inches of the fitting. If not IMHO its not a hull worth buying because if they skimped on that they skimped on a lot of other things along the way.
  5. Crusader /Volvo/Mercruiser blocks are all GM. They may use different manifolds/carbs/water pumps etc. The working part of the engines are good ol American iron.
  6. I didn't get much info on this but from what I can gather there seemed to be a lack of life preservers on board. Water temps are warm now, so if he had managed to get one on I truly think he would of survived. This is a story that all that fish on any body of water should take heed of. Go over with all on board before you cast away from shore the location of LIFE preservers, flares and any communication devices on board and how to use them. Also everyone should try to stick together while in the water,even tying yourselves together if need be. This tragedy should of never happened with the lake conditions having been so calm for the last few weeks. My prayers do go out to the family.
  7. "Great boats", just poorly built , nothing to do with age, enough said.
  8. If I had all those issues with my boat I would be looking for a different brand. Seems somewhat common with Penn Yan and a few other boat companies out there.
  9. Have you checked Craigslist ? I see one, 87, in Union Springs for a grand and there is one listed in Buffalo that appears to be a bit more high performance , is carbed, can't tell what year it is asking 2500. Other than that or rebuilding what you have another option is to find a crapped out hull with a decent engine. Although some times they go hand in hand, boat not maintained, engine not maintained.
  10. Well it is his boat. He has 4 options, ,,,,,,leave it in Ontario,,,,,,,buy/rent/borrow a trailer,,,,,,,pay some local hauler/ try some marinas that have trailers before they get super busy hauling boats out, ,,,,,, or take the one time trip and have passport/ enhanced licence with you. Not sure if you can legally do it without at some point touching Canadian land .Maybe Google that to see what comes up.
  11. Yed ,it's a solid 8 hours once you get in the first lock. You may wait anywhere from 1 to 12 hours to get paired up with a freighter that you will go through the whole system with. Once you start there is no stopping along the way. They normally don't send pleasure boats through by themselves, probably to expensive and time consuming on there end. Somewhat exciting the first time and a royal pain anytime you have to do it again.
  12. You can research this topic on yachtsurvey.com. to get a comprehensive report on this subject.( Marine Engines is the title and then go to gas vs diesel and then open up the entire article.) Many points have been made, one that has not is the initial cost which can be astronomical compared to a gas engine. And it might take you 25 years( in this area )to make up any fuel savings. Diesel fuel nowadays is more money than gasoline There is also the weight of them on anything under 35ft to consider. You could probably drop in 4 more fresh engines into a gas boat and still be ahead of the extra money you laid out to buy the diesels. Oil changes and general maintenance on diesels vs gas is also through the roof. For me it would have to be a boat in the 40ft range ,anything under with the newer 7.4s/ 8.2s gassers out there would be more to my likings and cost efficient.
  13. Not true,almost all Tiaras have wood encapsulated stringers. All the boats mentioned so far have had moisture problems one way or another. Tiara the least of them,but some issues nevertheless. I would Google each make year and model to see what problems there may be. A survey is a must especially with the thermal.imaging devices that are out there being used. Of the 4 mentioned I would say the Tiara would be the most versatile one of them,specifically for overnight stays combined with fishing. Motors are 2500 - 3 grand all day long and if your handy there relatively easy to swap out. No reason they won't last 6-10,000 hours. Resale value is higher as well. You can get a mid to late 90s for 30 gs or less if your willing to look at a closed cooling system salty from the northeast as they are pulled about the same time as the great Lakes = less time sitting in saltwater. I know a lot of people that have gone that route with no issues besides a occasional exhaust manifold replacement. Good luck !
  14. I would expect the same "life " hours from a SB. Generally speaking the SB goes in a smaller /lighter hull than a BB. So they should be turning about the same rpms at cruise and pushing the same load in relation to there displacement. The only difference I might see is a 4 bolt main vs a 2 bolt but as noted the load difference may make up for that and if not horsed into a planning mode it shouldn't matter.
  15. The only thing about ASB is your 30+ miles from Buffalo. Your question was in the Buffalo area ,so if you consider that distance area, then yes ASB.
  16. Just message the guy on ebay and ask him if its two piece etc.
  17. I will be sure to bring that up at the Captains meeting for the WHI next year !!!
  18. I know two charter boats and one was over 6,000 hours when he swapped them out and the other is still running strong at 4,000 hours. In these cases 90-95% of the hours are trolling. To me there relatively cheap to buy,3-3500 for a long block vs the price of a new outboard which are outrageous.
  19. I would put money on it was a hit n run. Unless the parking lot has cameras the driver will never be found Can't even see any bumper paint on the damaged area, so it probably was a pickup...... As I was hitting the post icon the OP replied. Would like to see a picture of the repair job when done !
  20. I would use yellow or blue masking tape just because the original masking tape has a tendency to shred when removing. If you want to finish it flush you can sand it while hitting the tape. Eventually you will sand the tape off. Just try to end your strokes before going on the other side of the tape where the original gel coat is. If you go that route with the sanding then any masking tape will do bc your going to end up sanding it off. I think there is a 24 hour complete drying time,could be wrong on that, so get on it ASAP Saturday.
  21. Just glanced at one of the videos and the guy never taped it off. I would tape the area off ,makes for a cleaner look and is usually a smaller area to sand flush to the tape when done.
  22. "Handles like putty ,Hardens like steel, Sands like wood " Marine Tex is a heavy duty structural epoxy. This easy to use putty can be molded to any shape. Can be applied to vertical and overhead surfaces . Forms tenacious bond to fiberglass "
  23. I would use Marine Tex ,about 17.00 on ebay. Not sure how much West will gouge you but if you need it right away then that's your best option. Penetrates and is made for above and below the waterline. Easier to use than gel coat, which rarely matches anyway and IMHO not as durable. Probably do not want the raw glass getting any wetter than it already might be. Just rough it up a bit and apply per instructions. The white epoxy is probably a close match and over time has a tendency fade into a close match
  24. A little more info wouldn't hurt. Do you have a outboard or I/O and year/ make/ model might help.
  25. From what I can decipher from your post it sounds like the prop hub may be slipping under load. Do you have a spare prop that you can swap it out with ? Most non inboard props have a rubber hub that can come unglued over time.
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