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I too am from Pittsburgh (Moon Township, out by the airport). I bought
a 1995 Sea Pro Citation 19' Cuddy last year out of Cleveland. It is more than enough for the rivers, but I don't ever intend to go ocean. It has a 4 banger with an Alpha 1 outdrive, which is powerful enough for me but a 6 cyclinder wouldn't hurt at all. It is somewhat basic, but very clean and well maintained. I bought it with trailer for $4,200. Used it all last summer and a few times this year. All I have put into it is oil, plugs, self-winterizing, a new stereo and some brake work on the trailer. Last summer I did a two day trip down the Ohio with 4 people with no problem (do a google search and see my story about waking up in the middle of the night while moored close to shore with a barge cruising past about 6 feet away - about sh*t myself). I guess that the point is that reasonable quality can be had for a reasonable budget if you take some time and effort in the search. Personally, If I had it to do over I would look for about an 18' open bow runabout instead of the Cuddy cabin. I thought that the cabin would be good for my young grandsons, but I think they would enjoy the open bow more and it would be easier to launch and re-trailer. An open bow runabout would clearly be too light for ocean usage though in my opinion. Dave Hall On Thu, 1 Jun 2006 21:55:29 -0400, "Lost In Space/Woodchuck" wrote: I'm also from the Burgh' send me an e-mail. wrote in message roups.com... I'm the type of guy who's better at researching a product than I am at actually making a decision. I was last here years ago, laughing at the various debates between Harry and Skipper, since I pretty much believe in the David Pascoe dogma that a high quality boat is the only kind of boat you should buy. But then, like many, I ran into reality. First I thought I'd get a used boat cheap. But I quickly discovered that the under $5k used boat market was pretty much a swamp of derelicts uncared for by their owners, especially here in Pittsburgh, PA, which is not what I would call a world centre for boating. If you go up a bit further in price, you find the Ski Nautique brand. I love the design and construction quality, but they are so specialized towards skiing that they wouldn't make much of a comfortable, family oriented runabout I could use to blast around on the river, take pictures and have guests without the lamentable inhospitality of the true fishing boat. I asked the Wakeboard crowd about this, and they suggested Cobalt. So I visited http://www.cobaltboats.com/ and wow, what a cool company. But alas, if you go to their cheapest boat, the 200, you get prices like these: http://www.cobaltboats.com/model_lin...uipment200.php So I wound up checking out a new boat dealer that sold Bayliner. I was prepared to hate Bayliner. I am even on record somewhere deep in USENET history as agreeing with Harry that Bayliner is not the world's greatest boat. But at the same time, I am on the river, not an ocean. On the other hand, I plan to migrate down to Florida at some point and then maybe I will be on an ocean. So I'd like to have a boat that could go on the ocean that wouldn't empty my wallet every month. So I checked out Bayliner's entry level boat and it certainly looked far better than the old models. The saleslady, a really cool person, said they were, in fact, better than the old models. It's a pity she used the argument "They're the most popular boat on the planet! If they weren't good, people wouldn't buy them?" Try to talk that way to an Apple computer user who KNOWS everyone buys Windows, and you're not getting very far :-). But still, I want to be fair. And lo and behold, even here, I see even ol' Harry softening his opinion on them. Oh, he growls about the cleat size, but he seems to have lost a lot of his vim and vigour on the subject. I kept on looking, though. There's something notably unappealing about Bayliner. They don't talk much about quality. The rival dealer sold Larson, "Better-built boats". So I went to this site: http://www.everythingboats.com/ryob/...h.pl?type=list and I'll be darned if half the reviews of Larson were unfavorable and most of the reviews about Bayliner were raves! Reviews like this are bound to put you off on a boat: http://www.everythingboats.com/ryob/...ew&boat_id=326 http://www.everythingboats.com/ryob/...ew&boat_id=282 Well, in the end, I did find the perfect runabout. A little big and a bit greedy on fuel, and I'm not sure if you can even buy diesel on the Monongahela River, which might make refueling a bit interesting. But still, who could resist this one? http://powerandmotoryacht.com/boatte...02hinckleyT29/ for great pictures, see http://www.boats.com/sites/hinckley/...hinckley&pic=0 Well, the perfect boat if I had $335,000-odd to spend on a runabout. And it's sold already! I do admire the Hinckley service organization, though. Looks like they sell you the boat, if anything goes wrong, they fix it, they do the annual varnishing and polishing so your boat will never look old, and then if you get tired of it and want a bigger boat, they are there to sell it for you. The next owner will get a service history down to individidual light bulb replacements (stuff like Replace PAR 16 12v light bulb .... $28.95). I may not be able to afford that sort of thing, but I admire it enormously. Okay, back to reality. If I have aroud $20k to spend on a nice circa 18-20' runabout, what really are the best quality choices? What is the difference, in reality, between a $20,000-odd 20' Bayliner and a $45,000-odd 20' Cobalt? Thanks for your thoughts! D |
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