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"Roger Long" wrote in
: Capt. JG wrote: No doubt. Sabre seems to think it'd be acceptable protection. I think I don't want to find out. Sabre is, or was, simply following what the ABYC Standards said to do. It was industry standard but now understood to be inadequate. Don't find out ![]() My Sea Ray jetboat was made to ABYC standards, too. It said so right there on the little sticker. That's why the goddamned fuel tank inlet and vent fittings were way up under the cockpit decking so you couldn't even see them, much less change them or check them for tightness before the boat exploded. To get to them, you simply disassembled the entire boat and took the whole top off.....or you could take a rip saw and open a hole in the deck but you'd have to be careful not to go 1/2" too deep or you'd be cutting into the cheap milk bottle polyethelene plastic tank with 25 gallons of explosives inside held in with two tiny plastic angle brackets eating into the soft plastic's aft end. ABYC should be very proud..... The stereo fuse holder was on the forward bulkhead of the engine compartment held in with one screw. Everyone should own one Sea Ray in their life......just one. It's made by Bayliner....er, ah.....Brunswick....you know. |
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