Hey guys, we are seriously considering a 2002 GW 330 Express that was repowered in 2008 with DF300s (less than 100 hours). I've read all the Grady-hate on THT, and I'm inclined to believe the owners and fans rather than the detractors who heard third hand about a bad experience. I do have some reservations, however; primarily a boat this large, beamy, and heavy is powered by outboards. The lost transom space is also a turn off, as well as fishing around those outboards...but the interior layout is fantastic and makes up for it, especially for family use, and I suspect the newer Suzukis will perform admirably compared to old F225s.
The other primary contender right now is a similar age/similarly priced Albemarle 320XF. Very different boats with different focuses, however our intended use is the same for both: heavy offshore family fishing. We really want to be able to pull occasional overnighters, and the Grady (I think) would do that more comfortably than the Albie
Albemarles are overbuilt true "Carolina boats" and have rugged hulls that are hard to just beat for sportfishing. Overall Quality and fit-and-finish are above average, especially interior carpentry. The only negatives I've heard are that it is a "tender" hull design, and to stay away from the CAT 3116s.
Grady-Whites are also Carolina Boats, but I'm not sure that the SeaV2 hull is nearly as rugged, dry, or intended for hardcore offshore use as the Albemarle is. But I could be wrong.
We agree that a family-friendly offshore boat in this size range is what we need (my wife is more of a fisherman than I am). And yeah, I know, "all boats are a compromise." And it's the compromise where I need some informed advice!
Downsides of the Albie that I see:
- "tender" reputation of the 32's hull (made up for with quality of the ride, especially in a head-sea, which is reported to be superb)
- cabin space; from pictures, it doesn't seem like overnighting is particularly reasonable, unless we kick the kid/kids onto the helm deck with an air mattress
Selling points of the Grady:
The layout and second berth for the kids are pretty strong selling points for the Grady. The newer digital motors are also. No tower on this boat, but that's not a deal breaker. The wasted space of the eurotransom and outboards bothers me, but I've never fished it, and I imagine I'd get used to it. Is the 330 a cruiser disguised as a fishing boat, or would we be perfectly content fishing every weekend with the added benefit of dockside comfort?
I know the quality of Grady has been called into question with relatively new boats having construction problems (possibly caused my failure to follow maintenance recommendations), along with the negative Pasco reviews, which amusingly pan Grady AND Albemarle, but extol Luhrs. Go figure. :hmm
Anyway, we'd welcome any advice, especially from folks who own or have owned a 330. There are a ton of them on the market right now, and I wonder if that's in part because it should really be an inboard diesel boat for practicality and more economic operation.
The other primary contender right now is a similar age/similarly priced Albemarle 320XF. Very different boats with different focuses, however our intended use is the same for both: heavy offshore family fishing. We really want to be able to pull occasional overnighters, and the Grady (I think) would do that more comfortably than the Albie
Albemarles are overbuilt true "Carolina boats" and have rugged hulls that are hard to just beat for sportfishing. Overall Quality and fit-and-finish are above average, especially interior carpentry. The only negatives I've heard are that it is a "tender" hull design, and to stay away from the CAT 3116s.
Grady-Whites are also Carolina Boats, but I'm not sure that the SeaV2 hull is nearly as rugged, dry, or intended for hardcore offshore use as the Albemarle is. But I could be wrong.
We agree that a family-friendly offshore boat in this size range is what we need (my wife is more of a fisherman than I am). And yeah, I know, "all boats are a compromise." And it's the compromise where I need some informed advice!
Downsides of the Albie that I see:
- "tender" reputation of the 32's hull (made up for with quality of the ride, especially in a head-sea, which is reported to be superb)
- cabin space; from pictures, it doesn't seem like overnighting is particularly reasonable, unless we kick the kid/kids onto the helm deck with an air mattress
Selling points of the Grady:
The layout and second berth for the kids are pretty strong selling points for the Grady. The newer digital motors are also. No tower on this boat, but that's not a deal breaker. The wasted space of the eurotransom and outboards bothers me, but I've never fished it, and I imagine I'd get used to it. Is the 330 a cruiser disguised as a fishing boat, or would we be perfectly content fishing every weekend with the added benefit of dockside comfort?
I know the quality of Grady has been called into question with relatively new boats having construction problems (possibly caused my failure to follow maintenance recommendations), along with the negative Pasco reviews, which amusingly pan Grady AND Albemarle, but extol Luhrs. Go figure. :hmm
Anyway, we'd welcome any advice, especially from folks who own or have owned a 330. There are a ton of them on the market right now, and I wonder if that's in part because it should really be an inboard diesel boat for practicality and more economic operation.