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![]() Shortwave Sportfishing wrote: On 13 Jul 2005 22:51:56 -0700, " wrote: To view some comments on the Bayliner 242 Classic Cruiser: My brother's marina has two of these on the same pier he's on. I like the styling, although they seem a little slab sided to me. It's kind of like putting the sixties style cabin on a box and making the front end pointy if you get my drift. My brother went out on one and he said they tend to bounce a lot - they don't seem to have any real weight to them. Any thoughts on that? Live long and prosper, Tom This is one of the "walkthrough" items I do every month, and we don't get underway in the boat or claim that we have. The dealer says the boat will do over 30mph, and depending on sea state its easy to imagine there could indeed be quite a bit of bouncing. Some of the characteristics that make the boat trailerable, such as the light displacement and short waterline, give it a short and shallow "footprint". Peeling off some speed *should* reduce the bounce, but one would need to take the boat out to determine whether bouncing is much of a problem and how speed related it might be. Proper adjustment of trim and tabs would also have an effect on the amount of bouncing experienced. The "slab sides" are part of the evolution of this model. When it was introduced, there was less freeboard but there was an engine box in the cockpit. Inceasing the freeboard made it possible to place the engine under a hatch in the cockpit and free'd up a lot of additional space. Just another one of the compromises that every boat on the market is forced to deal with: more of this means less off- or too much of- something else. |
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