As you know, I love my 228. But are there things I wish were different? You bet, and here is my list for the 228:
Offer a pilot house version with no eigenglass, just glass windows with a vertical divider rather than the horizontal divider.
Hand rails on the hard top like Northcoast does.
Remains to be seen, but I did flap valves in the rear scuppers, if those work, do that. Not fun standing in water in a $130K boat.
I could whine about more cup holders or rod holders, but that seems petty.
What is your boat and what could they do better?
- I think a new size bow rider would be higher on the list than a pilot house add.
- If you they are not draining, then your scuppers are underwater I'd say. There is excessive weight in the boat or the scuppers are too low. Once they started strapping 4S on the back of these boats they should have raised them.
- Good idea on the hand rails but I'd want a thicker hardtop and cored with Coosa as well. Current design can't hold weight, is cored with balsa (unless changed) and is the thinnest layer of glass I've ever seen. It's a step above a bimini.
My ideas
- Fix the transom area and really focus on overbuilding it. Too many leaks, too many transom issues and I have to believe too much embarrassment by this point. Eliminate the bang plate and glass 100%. Get rid of anything screwed in that area (plastic pieces etc). Get rid of the brass drain tubes and glass in either glass or plastic tubes.
- Provide access for and a maintenance plan for dealers to do scupper line maintenance, put one way valves for emergencies and plump the valve hard to the scupper. Safety first.
- Make more parts avail to the customer base and be reasonable on the mark up. Expand your parts business aka Harley Davidson. No part should go end of life, hold stock based on units sold and age. I think they could make a super business if they figured this out. Can be a hedge to the core business in downtimes. Develop upgrade and refresh kits that customers can buy. Man, there is a lot in this space they could do if they wanted to be innovative and focus on it.
- Review the hatch and access designs on all models. Don't screw decks into fiberglass and use that and caulk to hold in. Eliminate the black rubber tabs that are stuffed in spots to mitigate fiberglass to fiberglass noise. If you need a pad, adhere a 100% pad around the entire seal so it is permanent.
- Really 100% no wood boats. Eliminate it 100% period. Never screw through the core. Cut core and provide glass plug keepout area for screws to pass through a part without touching the core.
- Screw in deck plates on the transom. Install with 4200 vs silicone.
- Before rub rail is installed. Seal the liner/hull joint before installing it. Too many stories of balsa coring (which should be gone) turning to mush on bigger boats.
- Buy a few top tier boats and destructively teardown to see what the competition is doing. Use higher end bonding and sealants (Plexus and Life Caulk come to mind) where needed.
- Benchmark and tour other manufacturers (pretend to be a buyer) and see what others are doing especially areas you are weak in.
- Put a wiring program in place and improve wiring techniques, labeling and materials (tinned wire). It doesn't have to be done to Hylas standards, but step it and dress it up better.