BoatBanter.com

BoatBanter.com (https://www.boatbanter.com/)
-   General (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/)
-   -   Anyone have a jet boat (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/70433-anyone-have-jet-boat.html)

Duke June 6th 06 10:14 PM

Anyone have a jet boat
 
Hello all,

I am thinking of getting a boat towards the end of this year. My wife and I
have been looking at the Sea Ray, Maxum, line up in the 20 - 22 foot range.
We have also looked at the Yamaha and the SeaDoo jet boats of the same size.
The only difference I can really see between the two are the engines. Both
types pretty much offer the same amenities. On the plus side for the jet
boats I see they have more horsepower (assuming standard engine) and weigh
about half as much as a conventional boat. However, when out on the water
you don't really see that many jet boats as compared to the thousands of
conventionally powered boats.

Is this because they have just not really caught on or is there some
underlying factor that I am missing ? Are the jet engines not as reliable
as the more conventional I/O engines ? Anyway own one that would buy one
again ?

Thanks for any insight,

Duke



Lost In Space/Woodchuck June 6th 06 10:18 PM

Anyone have a jet boat
 
jets drink gas faster than prop powered boats!


"Duke" wrote in message
news:ifmhg.9463$3i3.523@trnddc08...
Hello all,

I am thinking of getting a boat towards the end of this year. My wife and
I have been looking at the Sea Ray, Maxum, line up in the 20 - 22 foot
range. We have also looked at the Yamaha and the SeaDoo jet boats of the
same size. The only difference I can really see between the two are the
engines. Both types pretty much offer the same amenities. On the plus
side for the jet boats I see they have more horsepower (assuming standard
engine) and weigh about half as much as a conventional boat. However,
when out on the water you don't really see that many jet boats as compared
to the thousands of conventionally powered boats.

Is this because they have just not really caught on or is there some
underlying factor that I am missing ? Are the jet engines not as reliable
as the more conventional I/O engines ? Anyway own one that would buy one
again ?

Thanks for any insight,

Duke





RCE June 6th 06 10:53 PM

Anyone have a jet boat
 

"Duke" wrote in message
news:ifmhg.9463$3i3.523@trnddc08...
Hello all,

I am thinking of getting a boat towards the end of this year. My wife and
I have been looking at the Sea Ray, Maxum, line up in the 20 - 22 foot
range. We have also looked at the Yamaha and the SeaDoo jet boats of the
same size. The only difference I can really see between the two are the
engines. Both types pretty much offer the same amenities. On the plus
side for the jet boats I see they have more horsepower (assuming standard
engine) and weigh about half as much as a conventional boat. However,
when out on the water you don't really see that many jet boats as compared
to the thousands of conventionally powered boats.

Is this because they have just not really caught on or is there some
underlying factor that I am missing ? Are the jet engines not as reliable
as the more conventional I/O engines ? Anyway own one that would buy one
again ?

Thanks for any insight,

Duke




One reason is basic efficiency. Ol' John Ericsson, arrogant and pig headed
as he was, came up with a winner with the screw propeller. Simple and very
efficient. Although peaked and tweaked over the years, the basic design
hasn't changed.

RCE



Calif Bill June 7th 06 05:20 AM

Anyone have a jet boat
 

"Gene Kearns" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 06 Jun 2006 21:14:54 GMT, Duke penned the following well
considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats:

Hello all,

I am thinking of getting a boat towards the end of this year. My wife and
I
have been looking at the Sea Ray, Maxum, line up in the 20 - 22 foot
range.
We have also looked at the Yamaha and the SeaDoo jet boats of the same
size.
The only difference I can really see between the two are the engines.
Both
types pretty much offer the same amenities. On the plus side for the jet
boats I see they have more horsepower (assuming standard engine) and weigh
about half as much as a conventional boat. However, when out on the water
you don't really see that many jet boats as compared to the thousands of
conventionally powered boats.

Is this because they have just not really caught on or is there some
underlying factor that I am missing ? Are the jet engines not as reliable
as the more conventional I/O engines ? Anyway own one that would buy one
again ?


It is going to take about 100hp to get the same performance in a jet
boat that you would get with 50hp and a conventional propeller. Read
that: expensive to operate.

Personally, the only reason I would consider a jet is shallow water
operation in a flats boat.

Plus, jet boats handle weird...

--

Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC.

Homepage
http://myworkshop.idleplay.net/

Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguide
http://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats


Maybe in a jet Outboard, will you get a 50% efficiency. My Kodiak low
pressure pump is about 85% the efficiency of a prop and the new Hamilton
212's are about 95% efficiency. But with the Yamaha, SeaDoo's they are
running either a Rotex, very powerful, lightweight, and gas hog, or a
Sportjet, with a O/B powerhead to a crappy jetdrive. The Aluminum jetboats
of the Northwest are a lot better, but a lot more expensive. And steering
is great, as long as you have power. If in lakes and normal deepwater, run
a prop boat.



Duke June 7th 06 06:53 AM

Anyone have a jet boat
 

"Calif Bill" wrote in message
nk.net...

"Gene Kearns" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 06 Jun 2006 21:14:54 GMT, Duke penned the following well
considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats:

Hello all,

I am thinking of getting a boat towards the end of this year. My wife
and I
have been looking at the Sea Ray, Maxum, line up in the 20 - 22 foot
range.
We have also looked at the Yamaha and the SeaDoo jet boats of the same
size.
The only difference I can really see between the two are the engines.
Both
types pretty much offer the same amenities. On the plus side for the jet
boats I see they have more horsepower (assuming standard engine) and
weigh
about half as much as a conventional boat. However, when out on the
water
you don't really see that many jet boats as compared to the thousands of
conventionally powered boats.

Is this because they have just not really caught on or is there some
underlying factor that I am missing ? Are the jet engines not as
reliable
as the more conventional I/O engines ? Anyway own one that would buy one
again ?


It is going to take about 100hp to get the same performance in a jet
boat that you would get with 50hp and a conventional propeller. Read
that: expensive to operate.

Personally, the only reason I would consider a jet is shallow water
operation in a flats boat.

Plus, jet boats handle weird...

--

Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC.

Homepage
http://myworkshop.idleplay.net/

Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguide
http://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats


Maybe in a jet Outboard, will you get a 50% efficiency. My Kodiak low
pressure pump is about 85% the efficiency of a prop and the new Hamilton
212's are about 95% efficiency. But with the Yamaha, SeaDoo's they are
running either a Rotex, very powerful, lightweight, and gas hog, or a
Sportjet, with a O/B powerhead to a crappy jetdrive. The Aluminum
jetboats of the Northwest are a lot better, but a lot more expensive. And
steering is great, as long as you have power. If in lakes and normal
deepwater, run a prop boat.


Thanks for the replies everyone.

Duke



Tim June 7th 06 11:56 AM

Anyone have a jet boat
 
Everybody thought that Jet-boats looked cock as heckwitht heir shark
looking fronts, and giant 455 big blocks sticking up with chrome
risered exhause looking like the legendary Medusa. trumpeting and
making a lot of racket on the river. Interesting though, that with the
exception of the hole shot a 115 evinrude on a 17 foot glastron would
eat them on top end, and even as a 2 stroke, would do it on half the
fuel.

Sure busted a lot of egos.


Duke wrote:
"Calif Bill" wrote in message
nk.net...

"Gene Kearns" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 06 Jun 2006 21:14:54 GMT, Duke penned the following well
considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats:

Hello all,

I am thinking of getting a boat towards the end of this year. My wife
and I
have been looking at the Sea Ray, Maxum, line up in the 20 - 22 foot
range.
We have also looked at the Yamaha and the SeaDoo jet boats of the same
size.
The only difference I can really see between the two are the engines.
Both
types pretty much offer the same amenities. On the plus side for the jet
boats I see they have more horsepower (assuming standard engine) and
weigh
about half as much as a conventional boat. However, when out on the
water
you don't really see that many jet boats as compared to the thousands of
conventionally powered boats.

Is this because they have just not really caught on or is there some
underlying factor that I am missing ? Are the jet engines not as
reliable
as the more conventional I/O engines ? Anyway own one that would buy one
again ?

It is going to take about 100hp to get the same performance in a jet
boat that you would get with 50hp and a conventional propeller. Read
that: expensive to operate.

Personally, the only reason I would consider a jet is shallow water
operation in a flats boat.

Plus, jet boats handle weird...

--

Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC.

Homepage
http://myworkshop.idleplay.net/

Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguide
http://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats


Maybe in a jet Outboard, will you get a 50% efficiency. My Kodiak low
pressure pump is about 85% the efficiency of a prop and the new Hamilton
212's are about 95% efficiency. But with the Yamaha, SeaDoo's they are
running either a Rotex, very powerful, lightweight, and gas hog, or a
Sportjet, with a O/B powerhead to a crappy jetdrive. The Aluminum
jetboats of the Northwest are a lot better, but a lot more expensive. And
steering is great, as long as you have power. If in lakes and normal
deepwater, run a prop boat.


Thanks for the replies everyone.

Duke



MGG June 7th 06 05:07 PM

Anyone have a jet boat
 
Hi Duke,

I have a Yamaha SX230 HO, and couldn't be happier with it. When I was
looking for a boat to replace my 19' I/O, a jet wasn't even in the
equation...until I saw the rear deck setup of the Yamaha. Take a good look
at it on their website. The rear deck is very cool, and very functional.
It's a fabulous family boat...big, beamy, and loads of storage, which is
what we were after. Besides that, the top end is just over 50mph (GPS), and
it accelerates like a rocket.

The downsides you read are true. It's gas hungry, but not as bad as some
would lead you to believe. We go out maybe 3 times a month, so it's really
not an issue. If you boat every day, that it could hurt the wallet.

It does handle wierd, but compared to what? It just depends on what you're
used to. I had an I/O for a few years, and whenever I drove my friends
inboard, I thought THAT thing handled wierd g. That said, I did want to
improve the slow speed handling, and found a product called Cobra Jet
Steering Fins that did the trick. They bolt on to either side of the jet
nozzles, and now the boat handles much more like an I/O (even in reverse).
It was a quick fix for less than $300. Hell, you could probably make your
own, but you'd need a plasma cutter to cut the stainless steel.

That's my 2 pennies for whatever it's worth. Good luck with your decision.

--Mike







"Duke" wrote in message
news:ifmhg.9463$3i3.523@trnddc08...
Hello all,

I am thinking of getting a boat towards the end of this year. My wife and
I have been looking at the Sea Ray, Maxum, line up in the 20 - 22 foot
range. We have also looked at the Yamaha and the SeaDoo jet boats of the
same size. The only difference I can really see between the two are the
engines. Both types pretty much offer the same amenities. On the plus
side for the jet boats I see they have more horsepower (assuming standard
engine) and weigh about half as much as a conventional boat. However,
when out on the water you don't really see that many jet boats as compared
to the thousands of conventionally powered boats.

Is this because they have just not really caught on or is there some
underlying factor that I am missing ? Are the jet engines not as reliable
as the more conventional I/O engines ? Anyway own one that would buy one
again ?

Thanks for any insight,

Duke




Tim June 7th 06 06:36 PM

Anyone have a jet boat
 
Well said, Mike.

Over on Carlyle Lake, though, it's known to be brezey and water can
chop and swell with a gust of wind.

It's beknownst that some really low profile Jet boats have gone under
there, because of "torpedoing" when the water drops right out from
under neath you and you bullet the next wave with about 4 feet of water
heading over the bow. The nose drops, the wave is high, and the boat
heads right for the bottom.

Of course, I suppose that can happen to about any craft with the same
type fo profile.



MGG wrote:
Hi Duke,

I have a Yamaha SX230 HO, and couldn't be happier with it. When I was
looking for a boat to replace my 19' I/O, a jet wasn't even in the
equation...until I saw the rear deck setup of the Yamaha. Take a good look
at it on their website. The rear deck is very cool, and very functional.
It's a fabulous family boat...big, beamy, and loads of storage, which is
what we were after. Besides that, the top end is just over 50mph (GPS), and
it accelerates like a rocket.

The downsides you read are true. It's gas hungry, but not as bad as some
would lead you to believe. We go out maybe 3 times a month, so it's really
not an issue. If you boat every day, that it could hurt the wallet.

It does handle wierd, but compared to what? It just depends on what you're
used to. I had an I/O for a few years, and whenever I drove my friends
inboard, I thought THAT thing handled wierd g. That said, I did want to
improve the slow speed handling, and found a product called Cobra Jet
Steering Fins that did the trick. They bolt on to either side of the jet
nozzles, and now the boat handles much more like an I/O (even in reverse).
It was a quick fix for less than $300. Hell, you could probably make your
own, but you'd need a plasma cutter to cut the stainless steel.

That's my 2 pennies for whatever it's worth. Good luck with your decision.

--Mike







"Duke" wrote in message
news:ifmhg.9463$3i3.523@trnddc08...
Hello all,

I am thinking of getting a boat towards the end of this year. My wife and
I have been looking at the Sea Ray, Maxum, line up in the 20 - 22 foot
range. We have also looked at the Yamaha and the SeaDoo jet boats of the
same size. The only difference I can really see between the two are the
engines. Both types pretty much offer the same amenities. On the plus
side for the jet boats I see they have more horsepower (assuming standard
engine) and weigh about half as much as a conventional boat. However,
when out on the water you don't really see that many jet boats as compared
to the thousands of conventionally powered boats.

Is this because they have just not really caught on or is there some
underlying factor that I am missing ? Are the jet engines not as reliable
as the more conventional I/O engines ? Anyway own one that would buy one
again ?

Thanks for any insight,

Duke




MGG June 7th 06 11:40 PM

Anyone have a jet boat
 
Hi Tim,

I guess when many folks think of a jet boat, they think of those slender low
profile bullet looking things (for the most part). The newer ones (my Yamaha
in particular), look just like any other big bow-rider. It's 23' long has a
102" beam, and 20 degree dead rise. Heck, my boat handles the chop better
than my buddy's X-30. I guess what I'm saying is that you can't tell it's a
jet unless it's out of the water...or you hear it g.

--Mike

"Tim" wrote in message
oups.com...
Well said, Mike.

Over on Carlyle Lake, though, it's known to be brezey and water can
chop and swell with a gust of wind.

It's beknownst that some really low profile Jet boats have gone under
there, because of "torpedoing" when the water drops right out from
under neath you and you bullet the next wave with about 4 feet of water
heading over the bow. The nose drops, the wave is high, and the boat
heads right for the bottom.

Of course, I suppose that can happen to about any craft with the same
type fo profile.



MGG wrote:
Hi Duke,

I have a Yamaha SX230 HO, and couldn't be happier with it. When I was
looking for a boat to replace my 19' I/O, a jet wasn't even in the
equation...until I saw the rear deck setup of the Yamaha. Take a good
look
at it on their website. The rear deck is very cool, and very functional.
It's a fabulous family boat...big, beamy, and loads of storage, which is
what we were after. Besides that, the top end is just over 50mph (GPS),
and
it accelerates like a rocket.

The downsides you read are true. It's gas hungry, but not as bad as some
would lead you to believe. We go out maybe 3 times a month, so it's
really
not an issue. If you boat every day, that it could hurt the wallet.

It does handle wierd, but compared to what? It just depends on what
you're
used to. I had an I/O for a few years, and whenever I drove my friends
inboard, I thought THAT thing handled wierd g. That said, I did want to
improve the slow speed handling, and found a product called Cobra Jet
Steering Fins that did the trick. They bolt on to either side of the jet
nozzles, and now the boat handles much more like an I/O (even in
reverse).
It was a quick fix for less than $300. Hell, you could probably make your
own, but you'd need a plasma cutter to cut the stainless steel.

That's my 2 pennies for whatever it's worth. Good luck with your
decision.

--Mike







"Duke" wrote in message
news:ifmhg.9463$3i3.523@trnddc08...
Hello all,

I am thinking of getting a boat towards the end of this year. My wife
and
I have been looking at the Sea Ray, Maxum, line up in the 20 - 22 foot
range. We have also looked at the Yamaha and the SeaDoo jet boats of
the
same size. The only difference I can really see between the two are the
engines. Both types pretty much offer the same amenities. On the plus
side for the jet boats I see they have more horsepower (assuming
standard
engine) and weigh about half as much as a conventional boat. However,
when out on the water you don't really see that many jet boats as
compared
to the thousands of conventionally powered boats.

Is this because they have just not really caught on or is there some
underlying factor that I am missing ? Are the jet engines not as
reliable
as the more conventional I/O engines ? Anyway own one that would buy
one
again ?

Thanks for any insight,

Duke





Tim June 8th 06 05:46 AM

Anyone have a jet boat
 
you got a point there, Mike.

Thanks for the clarification


MGG wrote:
Hi Tim,

I guess when many folks think of a jet boat, they think of those slender low
profile bullet looking things (for the most part). The newer ones (my Yamaha
in particular), look just like any other big bow-rider. It's 23' long has a
102" beam, and 20 degree dead rise. Heck, my boat handles the chop better
than my buddy's X-30. I guess what I'm saying is that you can't tell it's a
jet unless it's out of the water...or you hear it g.

--Mike

"Tim" wrote in message
oups.com...
Well said, Mike.

Over on Carlyle Lake, though, it's known to be brezey and water can
chop and swell with a gust of wind.

It's beknownst that some really low profile Jet boats have gone under
there, because of "torpedoing" when the water drops right out from
under neath you and you bullet the next wave with about 4 feet of water
heading over the bow. The nose drops, the wave is high, and the boat
heads right for the bottom.

Of course, I suppose that can happen to about any craft with the same
type fo profile.



MGG wrote:
Hi Duke,

I have a Yamaha SX230 HO, and couldn't be happier with it. When I was
looking for a boat to replace my 19' I/O, a jet wasn't even in the
equation...until I saw the rear deck setup of the Yamaha. Take a good
look
at it on their website. The rear deck is very cool, and very functional.
It's a fabulous family boat...big, beamy, and loads of storage, which is
what we were after. Besides that, the top end is just over 50mph (GPS),
and
it accelerates like a rocket.

The downsides you read are true. It's gas hungry, but not as bad as some
would lead you to believe. We go out maybe 3 times a month, so it's
really
not an issue. If you boat every day, that it could hurt the wallet.

It does handle wierd, but compared to what? It just depends on what
you're
used to. I had an I/O for a few years, and whenever I drove my friends
inboard, I thought THAT thing handled wierd g. That said, I did want to
improve the slow speed handling, and found a product called Cobra Jet
Steering Fins that did the trick. They bolt on to either side of the jet
nozzles, and now the boat handles much more like an I/O (even in
reverse).
It was a quick fix for less than $300. Hell, you could probably make your
own, but you'd need a plasma cutter to cut the stainless steel.

That's my 2 pennies for whatever it's worth. Good luck with your
decision.

--Mike







"Duke" wrote in message
news:ifmhg.9463$3i3.523@trnddc08...
Hello all,

I am thinking of getting a boat towards the end of this year. My wife
and
I have been looking at the Sea Ray, Maxum, line up in the 20 - 22 foot
range. We have also looked at the Yamaha and the SeaDoo jet boats of
the
same size. The only difference I can really see between the two are the
engines. Both types pretty much offer the same amenities. On the plus
side for the jet boats I see they have more horsepower (assuming
standard
engine) and weigh about half as much as a conventional boat. However,
when out on the water you don't really see that many jet boats as
compared
to the thousands of conventionally powered boats.

Is this because they have just not really caught on or is there some
underlying factor that I am missing ? Are the jet engines not as
reliable
as the more conventional I/O engines ? Anyway own one that would buy
one
again ?

Thanks for any insight,

Duke






All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:28 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com