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Thought I'd start a thread to ask owners why a Grady and your overall experience.
I'm a two Grady boat owner (282 and 300) both were new. What I really like:
- Proven hull design. The 300 ride feels like a much bigger boat and 300 to 282 was like moving from a yacht from a boat. It isn't a wet hull and can handle anything I can throw at it.
- Easy maintenance. (outside and cabin).
- Simplicity of systems. I've found I can fix just about anything.
- GW Cust service and dealers support. I've had a couple of problems and they have both stood behind the product 100%. Even when things didn't go 100% my way I felt they listened and treated me fairly.
- Reliability. 13 years between the two boats and no major breakdown or problems with either boat or motor.
- Saftety. I've never felt that I wouldn't get in. I've had about 3 really bad weather days when either I should have not gone out or it just turned bad on me. I had white knuckes, but the boats performed and got me back.
- Improvements considered and rolled in. There were a few design quirks I really didn't like, but you can tell GW listens and makes changes based on customer input. Rear hatch access was a big one for me. Having to pull the deck and caulk every year stinks. Fixed in new models.
My suggestion for some improvements.
For the larger boats - consider a starboard helm configuration like the 300 and Pursuit OS385. This would maximize seating and give much cleaner cabin access IMHO, but I understand I may be in the minority as folks seem to like the center helm.
Maybe develop a sharper parts focus in this area and offer parts for all boats. Some can be provided by GW direct, some by dealers, others have a catalog so they can be ordered from the manufacturer. It can be done today, but in some cases you need to do some leg work.
I'm a two Grady boat owner (282 and 300) both were new. What I really like:
- Proven hull design. The 300 ride feels like a much bigger boat and 300 to 282 was like moving from a yacht from a boat. It isn't a wet hull and can handle anything I can throw at it.
- Easy maintenance. (outside and cabin).
- Simplicity of systems. I've found I can fix just about anything.
- GW Cust service and dealers support. I've had a couple of problems and they have both stood behind the product 100%. Even when things didn't go 100% my way I felt they listened and treated me fairly.
- Reliability. 13 years between the two boats and no major breakdown or problems with either boat or motor.
- Saftety. I've never felt that I wouldn't get in. I've had about 3 really bad weather days when either I should have not gone out or it just turned bad on me. I had white knuckes, but the boats performed and got me back.
- Improvements considered and rolled in. There were a few design quirks I really didn't like, but you can tell GW listens and makes changes based on customer input. Rear hatch access was a big one for me. Having to pull the deck and caulk every year stinks. Fixed in new models.
My suggestion for some improvements.
For the larger boats - consider a starboard helm configuration like the 300 and Pursuit OS385. This would maximize seating and give much cleaner cabin access IMHO, but I understand I may be in the minority as folks seem to like the center helm.
Maybe develop a sharper parts focus in this area and offer parts for all boats. Some can be provided by GW direct, some by dealers, others have a catalog so they can be ordered from the manufacturer. It can be done today, but in some cases you need to do some leg work.