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To SWS, JimH, et al - I finally got a boat!
"bo jangles" wrote in message ... Thanks y'all for your insight and direction. With your info and the info I picked up on sites you directed me to I was able to make a reasonably informed decision. After making some loooong trips and some failed negotiations (Seaswirl) I actually located a dealer about an hour from my home that carried Key West and happened to have a 2004 leftover he was motivated to move out the door. Not in the driveway yet but will be if I can locate a long haul trailer I like and my motor comes in. She's a KW 225CC with a Merc 225 4s (Yamaha) with a free motor extended wty. Now, if anyone would like to suggest electronics, I would be glad to listen. It was suggested that I get a Raymarine C80 w/DSM300 and P66 ducer. Any opinions? Thanks again for your help. Congratulations. Nice looking boat! http://tinyurl.com/9pfkr |
On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 14:23:04 GMT, bo jangles wrote:
Thanks y'all for your insight and direction. With your info and the info I picked up on sites you directed me to I was able to make a reasonably informed decision. After making some loooong trips and some failed negotiations (Seaswirl) I actually located a dealer about an hour from my home that carried Key West and happened to have a 2004 leftover he was motivated to move out the door. Not in the driveway yet but will be if I can locate a long haul trailer I like and my motor comes in. She's a KW 225CC with a Merc 225 4s (Yamaha) with a free motor extended wty. Now, if anyone would like to suggest electronics, I would be glad to listen. It was suggested that I get a Raymarine C80 w/DSM300 and P66 ducer. Any opinions? Thanks again for your help. Very nice boat! Good luck! -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
For electronics, I'd go with the major players. Standard Horizon for VHF,
Garmin for GPS, Furuno for Radar and whoever for FF. I don't like the all in one package deal cause if you lose one, you may lose all. In a thick fog with no radar or gps and things could get hairy. Gordon "bo jangles" wrote in message ... On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 10:44:04 -0400, "Harry.Krause" wrote: bo jangles wrote: Thanks y'all for your insight and direction. With your info and the info I picked up on sites you directed me to I was able to make a reasonably informed decision. After making some loooong trips and some failed negotiations (Seaswirl) I actually located a dealer about an hour from my home that carried Key West and happened to have a 2004 leftover he was motivated to move out the door. Not in the driveway yet but will be if I can locate a long haul trailer I like and my motor comes in. She's a KW 225CC with a Merc 225 4s (Yamaha) with a free motor extended wty. Now, if anyone would like to suggest electronics, I would be glad to listen. It was suggested that I get a Raymarine C80 w/DSM300 and P66 ducer. Any opinions? Thanks again for your help. Nice boat; you'll enjoy. As to electronics, I'd first find myself a big West Marine or Boat/US or similar store, and plan on spending the day there, messing around with the various electronics that interest you. Raymarine stuff is fine, but there are plenty of good brands out there. What matters is user friendliness, ability to see the screens in various sunlight conditions, warranty, et cetera. I don't know where you boat. Your first electronics purchase should be a first class VHF radio and a first class antenna. I prefer separate fishfinders and nav units, but others like the combo units, which I believe the Ray is. Is the dealer going to install your electronics? Yep - part of the deal is to install the electronics at no additional charge. I have a few weeks to decide what and where. And, I live in a landlocked portion of PA so no West Marine, etc. |
On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 11:10:19 -0700, "Gordon" wrote:
For electronics, I'd go with the major players. Standard Horizon for VHF, Garmin for GPS, Furuno for Radar and whoever for FF. I don't like the all in one package deal cause if you lose one, you may lose all. In a thick fog with no radar or gps and things could get hairy. Gordon "bo jangles" wrote in message .. . On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 10:44:04 -0400, "Harry.Krause" wrote: bo jangles wrote: Thanks y'all for your insight and direction. With your info and the info I picked up on sites you directed me to I was able to make a reasonably informed decision. After making some loooong trips and some failed negotiations (Seaswirl) I actually located a dealer about an hour from my home that carried Key West and happened to have a 2004 leftover he was motivated to move out the door. Not in the driveway yet but will be if I can locate a long haul trailer I like and my motor comes in. She's a KW 225CC with a Merc 225 4s (Yamaha) with a free motor extended wty. Now, if anyone would like to suggest electronics, I would be glad to listen. It was suggested that I get a Raymarine C80 w/DSM300 and P66 ducer. Any opinions? Thanks again for your help. Nice boat; you'll enjoy. As to electronics, I'd first find myself a big West Marine or Boat/US or similar store, and plan on spending the day there, messing around with the various electronics that interest you. Raymarine stuff is fine, but there are plenty of good brands out there. What matters is user friendliness, ability to see the screens in various sunlight conditions, warranty, et cetera. I don't know where you boat. Your first electronics purchase should be a first class VHF radio and a first class antenna. I prefer separate fishfinders and nav units, but others like the combo units, which I believe the Ray is. Is the dealer going to install your electronics? Yep - part of the deal is to install the electronics at no additional charge. I have a few weeks to decide what and where. And, I live in a landlocked portion of PA so no West Marine, etc. One last word of advice...measure before you buy! -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
"Gordon" wrote in message ... For electronics, I'd go with the major players. Standard Horizon for VHF, Yes. Garmin for GPS, Definitely Furuno for Radar and whoever for FF. I don't like the all in one package deal cause if you lose one, you may lose all. In a thick fog with no radar or gps and things could get hairy. But a Garmin mapping handheld as backup. |
On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 14:23:04 GMT, bo jangles wrote:
Thanks y'all for your insight and direction. With your info and the info I picked up on sites you directed me to I was able to make a reasonably informed decision. After making some loooong trips and some failed negotiations (Seaswirl) I actually located a dealer about an hour from my home that carried Key West and happened to have a 2004 leftover he was motivated to move out the door. Not in the driveway yet but will be if I can locate a long haul trailer I like and my motor comes in. She's a KW 225CC with a Merc 225 4s (Yamaha) with a free motor extended wty. Now, if anyone would like to suggest electronics, I would be glad to listen. It was suggested that I get a Raymarine C80 w/DSM300 and P66 ducer. Any opinions? Thanks again for your help. Very nice boat. I looked one over at the CMTA Hartford Boat Show this past winter. Probably priced right - the one I saw was. If course, I'd be remiss if I didn't make some kind of smart ass remark about Mercs, but I will refrain. :) One thing is for sure - get the warranty and extended warranty on that engine and in writing - keep it in a safe place. Make absolutely sure the dealer gives you extended warranty paperwork and that it CLEARLY spells out the length of time. And DON'T have the dealer send the warranty paperwork to Mercury - do it yourself with a return receipt for the paperwork. Trust me on that. As to electronics, you will get as many opinions as there are eyes on this NG. I am partial to Raymarine - for a boat that size, the RC400 portable chartplotter with the Navionics Gold package for your area is probably a great idea. I have the Raymarine DS500 linked into the RC400 and it's a great combination. Garmin is a good product (although once again, I wouldn't own one - I carry a huge grudge against Garmin) as is Lowrance. I prefer Lowrance because they use the Navionics plotting package which I like a lot. For VHF, stick with the usual suspects, Standard, Uniden, Icom and the new West Marine VHF I've been very impressed with. I use Icom radios. Try to get a radio with DSC if you can. If you have a T-top with a rail mount, get an 8 foot base loaded 5101 Shakespeare - if not, a rail mount base loaded stainless steel whip - Shakespeare makes one as does a company called Metz. Personally, I wouldn't use a Metz antenna if you paid me to - never have had one that worked worth a damn although Metz will happily replace them until you turn blue in the face. Get a roller trailer - easier to launch and recover. Good luck and enjoy that puppy - it's a nice boat. Later, Tom |
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