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#1
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On Jun 18, 7:34 pm, John H. wrote:
Glad to hear all went so well, Tim. You got one hell of a deal. You must have some great karma!- "Karma"? Well? I suppose "Karma" wil be determined by how many gallons this beast will guzzle over a summer.... ?: whe I got the boat, the fuel tank was reading at 1/2. you could jossle the boat a bit and the fuel guage would twitch, so I knew it there was "something" in there. first day out, I dropped in $50.00 (15 gal) *gulp!* That raised the tank to 3/4. OK, I feel better now. after cruising and playing for a bit, retired for the day. Sat, I dropped anopther $50.00 in it *gulp!* and that raised it to "full" so.... I have now idea how much gas this boat holds, but I'd say it has close to a 50 gal tank. Eh, what the heck. If I was worried about economy, I wouldn't have a boat anyhow. It's all equated in the "fun factor", John. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 02:50:51 -0700, Tim wrote:
On Jun 18, 7:34 pm, John H. wrote: Glad to hear all went so well, Tim. You got one hell of a deal. You must have some great karma!- "Karma"? Well? I suppose "Karma" wil be determined by how many gallons this beast will guzzle over a summer.... ?: whe I got the boat, the fuel tank was reading at 1/2. you could jossle the boat a bit and the fuel guage would twitch, so I knew it there was "something" in there. first day out, I dropped in $50.00 (15 gal) *gulp!* That raised the tank to 3/4. OK, I feel better now. after cruising and playing for a bit, retired for the day. Sat, I dropped anopther $50.00 in it *gulp!* and that raised it to "full" so.... I have now idea how much gas this boat holds, but I'd say it has close to a 50 gal tank. Eh, what the heck. If I was worried about economy, I wouldn't have a boat anyhow. It's all equated in the "fun factor", John. Nope, karma is what determined that you didn't get a boat full of sneaky little problems that would creap up on you when you were least expecting it! Sounds like your 'fun factor' was running quite high. Great! |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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Tim wrote:
On Jun 18, 7:34 pm, John H. wrote: Glad to hear all went so well, Tim. You got one hell of a deal. You must have some great karma!- "Karma"? Well? I suppose "Karma" wil be determined by how many gallons this beast will guzzle over a summer.... ?: whe I got the boat, the fuel tank was reading at 1/2. you could jossle the boat a bit and the fuel guage would twitch, so I knew it there was "something" in there. first day out, I dropped in $50.00 (15 gal) *gulp!* That raised the tank to 3/4. OK, I feel better now. after cruising and playing for a bit, retired for the day. Sat, I dropped anopther $50.00 in it *gulp!* and that raised it to "full" so.... I have now idea how much gas this boat holds, but I'd say it has close to a 50 gal tank. Eh, what the heck. If I was worried about economy, I wouldn't have a boat anyhow. It's all equated in the "fun factor", John. Tim, You will find the gas guage will probably not reflect the actual amount of gas in the tank, (ie in a 50 gal tank, a guage reading 1/2 full will not mean you have 25 gals of gas). So make sure you watch how fast the guage will drop once you get below 1/3 of a tank. I have found by running the boat in the 3200-3300 rpm range (fast enough to keep it on plane), gives me just as much fun factor per hour, at substantial lower gph. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On Jun 19, 6:58 am, "Reginald P. Smithers III"
wrote: Tim wrote: On Jun 18, 7:34 pm, John H. wrote: Glad to hear all went so well, Tim. You got one hell of a deal. You must have some great karma!- "Karma"? Well? I suppose "Karma" wil be determined by how many gallons this beast will guzzle over a summer.... ?: whe I got the boat, the fuel tank was reading at 1/2. you could jossle the boat a bit and the fuel guage would twitch, so I knew it there was "something" in there. first day out, I dropped in $50.00 (15 gal) *gulp!* That raised the tank to 3/4. OK, I feel better now. after cruising and playing for a bit, retired for the day. Sat, I dropped anopther $50.00 in it *gulp!* and that raised it to "full" so.... I have now idea how much gas this boat holds, but I'd say it has close to a 50 gal tank. Eh, what the heck. If I was worried about economy, I wouldn't have a boat anyhow. It's all equated in the "fun factor", John. Tim, You will find the gas guage will probably not reflect the actual amount of gas in the tank, (ie in a 50 gal tank, a guage reading 1/2 full will not mean you have 25 gals of gas). So make sure you watch how fast the guage will drop once you get below 1/3 of a tank. I have found by running the boat in the 3200-3300 rpm range (fast enough to keep it on plane), gives me just as much fun factor per hour, at substantial lower gph.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - agreed. 32-3300 is an ideal and comfortable rpm My nephews idea of fun factor is WOT untill the rods start hammering. |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 05:48:00 -0700, Tim wrote:
On Jun 19, 6:58 am, "Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote: Tim wrote: On Jun 18, 7:34 pm, John H. wrote: Glad to hear all went so well, Tim. You got one hell of a deal. You must have some great karma!- "Karma"? Well? I suppose "Karma" wil be determined by how many gallons this beast will guzzle over a summer.... ?: whe I got the boat, the fuel tank was reading at 1/2. you could jossle the boat a bit and the fuel guage would twitch, so I knew it there was "something" in there. first day out, I dropped in $50.00 (15 gal) *gulp!* That raised the tank to 3/4. OK, I feel better now. after cruising and playing for a bit, retired for the day. Sat, I dropped anopther $50.00 in it *gulp!* and that raised it to "full" so.... I have now idea how much gas this boat holds, but I'd say it has close to a 50 gal tank. Eh, what the heck. If I was worried about economy, I wouldn't have a boat anyhow. It's all equated in the "fun factor", John. Tim, You will find the gas guage will probably not reflect the actual amount of gas in the tank, (ie in a 50 gal tank, a guage reading 1/2 full will not mean you have 25 gals of gas). So make sure you watch how fast the guage will drop once you get below 1/3 of a tank. I have found by running the boat in the 3200-3300 rpm range (fast enough to keep it on plane), gives me just as much fun factor per hour, at substantial lower gph.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - agreed. 32-3300 is an ideal and comfortable rpm My nephews idea of fun factor is WOT untill the rods start hammering. My 350 *loves* 32-3300rpm! |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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Tim wrote:
On Jun 18, 7:34 pm, John H. wrote: Glad to hear all went so well, Tim. You got one hell of a deal. You must have some great karma!- "Karma"? Well? I suppose "Karma" wil be determined by how many gallons this beast will guzzle over a summer.... ?: whe I got the boat, the fuel tank was reading at 1/2. you could jossle the boat a bit and the fuel guage would twitch, so I knew it there was "something" in there. first day out, I dropped in $50.00 (15 gal) *gulp!* That raised the tank to 3/4. OK, I feel better now. after cruising and playing for a bit, retired for the day. Sat, I dropped anopther $50.00 in it *gulp!* and that raised it to "full" so.... I have now idea how much gas this boat holds, but I'd say it has close to a 50 gal tank. Eh, what the heck. If I was worried about economy, I wouldn't have a boat anyhow. It's all equated in the "fun factor", John. One of my boats has a 170-gallon gasoline tank. It's a 25-footer, nominally (measures about 32' from the ass end of the engine bracket to the front of the bow pulpit). At a decent cruise speed, the engine burns about nine gallons an hour. That's about $30-$32 an hour. Bad, but it could be worse, and probably will be at some point. I can keep track of the fuel burn because I have a flow gauge that does that for me. I go out fishing with three buddies. We split the costs for fuel and bait. Usually comes out to $25 a guy for a full day of fishing. That makes the cost reasonable, in my mind. Unless we're going a long distance by boat, I never keep more than 50-70 gallons in the tank. Carrying around an extra 100 gallons or so of gasoline wastes time, money and energy. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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That's why I usually don't fill the boat untill the last stop before
the lake. and Usually the Huck's is about the cheapest place to buy gas before we hit the water anyhow. HK wrote: Tim wrote: On Jun 18, 7:34 pm, John H. wrote: Glad to hear all went so well, Tim. You got one hell of a deal. You must have some great karma!- "Karma"? Well? I suppose "Karma" wil be determined by how many gallons this beast will guzzle over a summer.... ?: whe I got the boat, the fuel tank was reading at 1/2. you could jossle the boat a bit and the fuel guage would twitch, so I knew it there was "something" in there. first day out, I dropped in $50.00 (15 gal) *gulp!* That raised the tank to 3/4. OK, I feel better now. after cruising and playing for a bit, retired for the day. Sat, I dropped anopther $50.00 in it *gulp!* and that raised it to "full" so.... I have now idea how much gas this boat holds, but I'd say it has close to a 50 gal tank. Eh, what the heck. If I was worried about economy, I wouldn't have a boat anyhow. It's all equated in the "fun factor", John. One of my boats has a 170-gallon gasoline tank. It's a 25-footer, nominally (measures about 32' from the ass end of the engine bracket to the front of the bow pulpit). At a decent cruise speed, the engine burns about nine gallons an hour. That's about $30-$32 an hour. Bad, but it could be worse, and probably will be at some point. I can keep track of the fuel burn because I have a flow gauge that does that for me. I go out fishing with three buddies. We split the costs for fuel and bait. Usually comes out to $25 a guy for a full day of fishing. That makes the cost reasonable, in my mind. Unless we're going a long distance by boat, I never keep more than 50-70 gallons in the tank. Carrying around an extra 100 gallons or so of gasoline wastes time, money and energy. |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() Towing is the concern now. I use a 1990 Merc. Grand Marquis station wagon to pull the boat, and it has the same drive train as a 1/2 ton PU of the same year. It's a bit odd, to see a car towing a boat larger than itself, and if the trailer didn't have the surge brakes I probably wouldn't consider it. But the old battle wagon, is heavy enough, but with the automatic overdrive, it's a bit limp wristed. I mean, the engine in the boat is more power than what's in the car. I have found that towing out of overdrive, and running about 50 mph is it's best suit. Fuel milage drops from about 20 down to 10 mpg. So with a 120 mi. turn around, to the lake and back, it will suck a goodly tank full of gas just doing that. I don't know, I really don't need a pick up truck. I wouldn't mind having one if I was going to use it daily, that is utilizing the truck for more than hauling a boat. But that might be in store for the future. Until then, the wagon, is loaded with working creature comforts, and you can haul people and stuff in it, that is what you don't already throw in the boat. But until plans change, I suppose the old rule still applies: "You run what you brung" |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Tim" wrote in message ups.com... snip... I have found that towing out of overdrive, and running about 50 mph is it's best suit. Fuel milage drops from about 20 down to 10 mpg. So with a 120 mi. turn around, to the lake and back, it will suck a goodly tank full of gas just doing that. *When I leased my Ranger pickup they recommended switching off the overdrive when towing.* I don't know, I really don't need a pick up truck. I wouldn't mind having one if I was going to use it daily, that is utilizing the truck for more than hauling a boat. But that might be in store for the future. * My pickup fills the need for a 2nd vehicle. Wife is gone to work all day with the old mini-van, so I'd be more or less housebound without the truck. My # 2 son relies on it also....almost too much. I went and got a load of gravel in it this morning and he was complaining he wanted it within the hour to keep a haircut appointment.* |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() Don White wrote: * My pickup fills the need for a 2nd vehicle. Wife is gone to work all day with the old mini-van, so I'd be more or less housebound without the truck. My # 2 son relies on it also....almost too much. I went and got a load of gravel in it this morning and he was complaining he wanted it within the hour to keep a haircut appointment.* Don, did you tell him that the sooner he got a hold of a shovel and got it unloaded, the sooner he'd make his haircut apointment? |
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