Thanks!The 190/191/192 all have been in Grady's fleet for a long long time. The margin in a 192 is not as great as a bigger boat that's for sure. They make a ton of money selling just one Canyon 456 versus selling a 192. However, they will sell more 192s I would imagine than their flagship Canyon .
The 192 is a sweet spot boat for them I would think. It's a big 19 footer, plenty of room and is under $100k. They need that kind of market I would imagine.
I recall when the 330 came out. It was their biggest boat yet. Now it's a mid size Grady . Lol. Grady built their brand on boats between 19 and 23 feet in the 80s . It's their bread and butter. There us a reason the 208,228, 238 are still built. People want them even after 30 years of production.
Thats pretty expensive for a 19’ bowrider. Granted its a very well designed, very well built boat that is far superior to comparable 19’ers from other makers.The 190/191/192 all have been in Grady's fleet for a long long time. The margin in a 192 is not as great as a bigger boat that's for sure. They make a ton of money selling just one Canyon 456 versus selling a 192. However, they will sell more 192s I would imagine than their flagship Canyon .
The 192 is a sweet spot boat for them I would think. It's a big 19 footer, plenty of room and is under $100k. They need that kind of market I would imagine. .
This is very true but at entry level prices. If Grady made those compromises to reduce the price it wouldn’t be a true Grady.Hopefully not, every builder needs entry level boats.
Thanks, hopefully someone that knows someone at the factory sees this and will let us know if the 192 Freedom is history.
My Dad had the same advice for me when I started dating.....When I was first looking at boats and talked to an experienced fisherman, he said "don't get anything in the teens, you'll regret it". You can basically outgrow these smaller boats
Thanks, confirmed?The Freedom 192 is no longer available from Grady White.
Thanks, confirmed?
Thanks!We are a Grady White dealer, and just confirmed. Heard it a while ago too actually, but I double checked.
Bummer. The 192 does everything that I need and I wouldn't hesitate to buy another one. I don't consider it to be an "entry" level boat (as I've been boating for many decades and have owned a number of different boats over the years). I just don't need a bigger boat and I like to have something manageable for trailering, easy to dock, and solid enough to give me confidence when I'm out on Nantucket Sound and the weather kicks up.