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  #11   Report Post  
Calif Bill
 
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Default Newbee question. Bayliners on open sea


"Frank Hopkins" wrote in message
nk.net...
Hi Frank,

If you are planning extensive offshore usage in anything but ideal weather
and conditions, you will want to re-think a Bayliner. Bayliners have a bad
reputation for hull failures in heavy water. (See N.T.S.B. sinking reports
at Coast Guard website.) Also, the boat is built with a lot of wood, which
rots eventually. This is why they are so cheap to get into. Bayliners also
depreciate very fast too. If budget is your primary motivation, you would

be
better off with a better quality used boat.

Capt. Frank Hopkins
www.home.earthlink.net/~aartworks



"Snoopy" wrote in message
...
My dad is thinking about buying a sportboat.
Want to be able to waterski
Carry say 8 persons
But also maybe fish on open sea (Carib)
Also butget wise he is thinking of a Bayliner 215 Classic.
I'm wondering what is the (open) seaworthiness of such a Bayliner?

TIA
Frank




They do not sink anymore than most other boats. May be more Bayliner
sinkings, but there are more Bayliners. A 21' Bayliner, and most other 21'
boats are not going to handle 8 people very well. I have a 21' Forward
Console I/B boat and it would be really crowded with 8, I can run with 6
with comfort. And the Carib is a lot calmer most days than the Pacific
ocean off Northern Calif, and people fish a lot of Bayliners here. Most the
Trophy version.
Bill


  #12   Report Post  
Gould 0738
 
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Default Newbee question. Bayliners on open sea

A 21-foot Bayliner requires a diesel engine to go more than 500' offshore.
That good enough Chuck?


Only if it has spark plugs, and has to be rebuilt every 700 hours. :-)
  #13   Report Post  
Gould 0738
 
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Default Newbee question. Bayliners on open sea

If you are planning extensive offshore usage in anything but ideal weather
and conditions, you will want to re-think a Bayliner. Bayliners have a bad
reputation for hull failures in heavy water. (See N.T.S.B. sinking reports
at Coast Guard website.)


Link, please.

To a USCG cite that establishes Bayliners have a "reputation for hull failures"

I typed in "NTSB sinking reports" on the USCG search engine and got zip. I must
be doing something wrong, and I'd love to see the source of your impression.
Thanks


  #14   Report Post  
Calif Bill
 
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Default Newbee question. Bayliners on open sea


"Gould 0738" wrote in message
...
A 21-foot Bayliner requires a diesel engine to go more than 500'

offshore.
That good enough Chuck?


Only if it has spark plugs, and has to be rebuilt every 700 hours. :-)


Good one. I wonder at times why there are not more small diesel placed in
small fishing boats. When traveling in Europe, lots of small diesel cars.
1.5L size engines. These should make good fishing boat engines. I know
Mercruiser uses a Cummings 1.7L in some of their packages. e.g. 28' Procat.
Bill


  #15   Report Post  
Gould 0738
 
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Default Newbee question. Bayliners on open sea

Good one. I wonder at times why there are not more small diesel placed in
small fishing boats. When traveling in Europe, lots of small diesel cars.
1.5L size engines. These should make good fishing boat engines. I know
Mercruiser uses a Cummings 1.7L in some of their packages. e.g. 28' Procat.
Bill


I suspect we will see more diesel applications in the near future. I don't care
what the guys with the "for the price of a diesel egine I can afford to burn up
a lot of gasoline" argument say, I think the current economics of feeding 100
gph or more into twin 454's (at $2.50 -$3.00 a gallon) is going to inspire some
people who thought they had reached a gas vs. diesel conclusion to reconsider.


  #17   Report Post  
Calif Bill
 
Posts: n/a
Default Newbee question. Bayliners on open sea


"Gould 0738" wrote in message
...
Good one. I wonder at times why there are not more small diesel placed

in
small fishing boats. When traveling in Europe, lots of small diesel

cars.
1.5L size engines. These should make good fishing boat engines. I know
Mercruiser uses a Cummings 1.7L in some of their packages. e.g. 28'

Procat.
Bill


I suspect we will see more diesel applications in the near future. I don't

care
what the guys with the "for the price of a diesel egine I can afford to

burn up
a lot of gasoline" argument say, I think the current economics of feeding

100
gph or more into twin 454's (at $2.50 -$3.00 a gallon) is going to inspire

some
people who thought they had reached a gas vs. diesel conclusion to

reconsider.

I am not talking about the highpower / big dollar diesels. Lots of small
econocars in Europe are diesel. Most of the small 1-2 person commercial
fishing boats, about 22' long are diesel.
Bill


  #18   Report Post  
Harry Krause
 
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Default Newbee question. Bayliners on open sea

Calif Bill wrote:
"Gould 0738" wrote in message
...
Good one. I wonder at times why there are not more small diesel placed

in
small fishing boats. When traveling in Europe, lots of small diesel

cars.
1.5L size engines. These should make good fishing boat engines. I know
Mercruiser uses a Cummings 1.7L in some of their packages. e.g. 28'

Procat.
Bill


I suspect we will see more diesel applications in the near future. I don't

care
what the guys with the "for the price of a diesel egine I can afford to

burn up
a lot of gasoline" argument say, I think the current economics of feeding

100
gph or more into twin 454's (at $2.50 -$3.00 a gallon) is going to inspire

some
people who thought they had reached a gas vs. diesel conclusion to

reconsider.

I am not talking about the highpower / big dollar diesels. Lots of small
econocars in Europe are diesel. Most of the small 1-2 person commercial
fishing boats, about 22' long are diesel.
Bill



It's too bad Yanmar stopped the marketing of outboard diesels in this
country.
  #19   Report Post  
Mole
 
Posts: n/a
Default Newbee question. Bayliners on open sea

Welllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll...if you still consider a Trophy as a
Bayliner then YES! The Trophy 2052 (21' 7" LOA - other manufacturers call
it 21 foot...Trophy calls it 20 foot) does come with a diesel. lol Link is
he
http://www.trophyfishing.com/index.a...eqtype=1 ,8,9

Of course Trophy has been it's own company since the end of 2001 but it does
have it's roots in Bayliner.

--

"There is no terrorist threat in this country. This is a lie. This is the
biggest lie we've been told." Michael Moore, October 2003


"Gould 0738" wrote in message
...
I don't believe this thread exists. [head shakes]


Worse yet, I'm sure that somebody is about to chime in and *insist* that a
21-foot Bayliner has a diesel engine.


  #20   Report Post  
Harry Krause
 
Posts: n/a
Default Newbee question. Bayliners on open sea

Mole wrote:

Welllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll...if you still consider a Trophy as a
Bayliner then YES! The Trophy 2052 (21' 7" LOA - other manufacturers call
it 21 foot...Trophy calls it 20 foot) does come with a diesel. lol Link is
he
http://www.trophyfishing.com/index.a...eqtype=1 ,8,9

Of course Trophy has been it's own company since the end of 2001 but it does
have it's roots in Bayliner.



It isn't its own company. Bayliner simply stopped using the "Bayliner"
name in connection with Trophy boats for marketing reasons.

The problem with the "diesel" Trophy has nothing to do with the fact it
is mounted in a Bayliner. The problem is that it is mounted in
conjunction with an I/O.
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