Hey All...new to this forum. I recently purchased the boat in the subject line. It has the notched transom. I am currently restoring the boat (father son project with my dad and son). It has a nice hard top, new canvas, good hull. Boat came with al trailer - tandem axles. Price was right.
I am redoing the transom and making it a full height. I purchased coosa board and the supplies to glass it in. So, that should take care of the strength of the stern and yes...it had a wet transom (plywood is wet).
I am looking to repower it. The 225 2 stroke yamaha that was on it was grendaded. It's the reason the guy sold the boat. So, I am looking at Honda BF250 and Yahama F250 offshore. Wanting to go light and 4 stroke and drive by wire. I know it's crazy to hang this $$$ on a 1983 vessel, but it's worth it to me to have a new motor on it.
I intend to install a floatation style bracket from Armstrong or competitor on this boat. They say it offers 300# of floatation.
I am putting in a new gas tank and moving it forward in the boat (removed the old one -it's pitted. Bought a new one from a great guy - http://www.patriotmarinefab.net/ with a great price and quality.). Gas tank is 93 gallons.
So, I think I should be ok with going 4 stroke and balancing the boat (lighter stern material vs 228, floatation bracket, moving gas tank forward).
Anyone have experience with the Honda/Yamaha on this vintage of boat and performance? Any opinions on either motor? Curious how slow it will go (for trolling - can I be below 2 mph)? Top speed and cruise? Fuel burn?
I am replacing all thru hull fittings for safety sake....new fuel and vent lines...and looking to install new updated switches (maybe these guys https://newwiremarine.com/custom-marine-switch-panels/ ). Anyone use them? I want to make this a reliable, updated vessel. When done - new motor, new controls, new gas tank, new electrical switches, new canvas. I know that's a lot for a 1983 boat, but it will be "like new" in most aspects. I think a new one is going to be over $90,000, correct?
Anyone done this before? Any thoughts or advice? Other than "don't do it" which is too late...I'm committed LOL!
I have a younger family (8 and 10 year old kids) and want something safe, something that provides protection from the elements, has a lot of space for fishing and messing around, and can be taken to the ocean for a trip annually. It will be trailered (not kept on water) and used primarily in Lake Erie. I grew up on Lake Erie with a Tiara and then a 34' Luhrs...so I know the Lake can be nasty...
Thanks in advance!
I am redoing the transom and making it a full height. I purchased coosa board and the supplies to glass it in. So, that should take care of the strength of the stern and yes...it had a wet transom (plywood is wet).
I am looking to repower it. The 225 2 stroke yamaha that was on it was grendaded. It's the reason the guy sold the boat. So, I am looking at Honda BF250 and Yahama F250 offshore. Wanting to go light and 4 stroke and drive by wire. I know it's crazy to hang this $$$ on a 1983 vessel, but it's worth it to me to have a new motor on it.
I intend to install a floatation style bracket from Armstrong or competitor on this boat. They say it offers 300# of floatation.
I am putting in a new gas tank and moving it forward in the boat (removed the old one -it's pitted. Bought a new one from a great guy - http://www.patriotmarinefab.net/ with a great price and quality.). Gas tank is 93 gallons.
So, I think I should be ok with going 4 stroke and balancing the boat (lighter stern material vs 228, floatation bracket, moving gas tank forward).
Anyone have experience with the Honda/Yamaha on this vintage of boat and performance? Any opinions on either motor? Curious how slow it will go (for trolling - can I be below 2 mph)? Top speed and cruise? Fuel burn?
I am replacing all thru hull fittings for safety sake....new fuel and vent lines...and looking to install new updated switches (maybe these guys https://newwiremarine.com/custom-marine-switch-panels/ ). Anyone use them? I want to make this a reliable, updated vessel. When done - new motor, new controls, new gas tank, new electrical switches, new canvas. I know that's a lot for a 1983 boat, but it will be "like new" in most aspects. I think a new one is going to be over $90,000, correct?
Anyone done this before? Any thoughts or advice? Other than "don't do it" which is too late...I'm committed LOL!
I have a younger family (8 and 10 year old kids) and want something safe, something that provides protection from the elements, has a lot of space for fishing and messing around, and can be taken to the ocean for a trip annually. It will be trailered (not kept on water) and used primarily in Lake Erie. I grew up on Lake Erie with a Tiara and then a 34' Luhrs...so I know the Lake can be nasty...
Thanks in advance!