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#1
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Hi guys
I'm thinking of selling my Bayliner 2052 cuddy to buy a bowrider.I've never had or been in one. I was wondering the thoughts of the members here what you guys think of bowriders. In the past,i've had the occasional night on board but now the cuddy seems to be used for storage and a lot of wasted space,although great for the toilet use. I rather like the idea of being able to sit up front with nothing infront to block the view and to achieve a little more floor space for friends rather than all sitting at the back. So, any pro's and cons.I'm talking trailerable 20-22 foot. Does it perhaps get a bit too cold to sit up front as your going along?,too bouncy a ride? too wet from splash? Any thoughts would be greatful Thankyou Simon |
#2
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![]() gilly wrote: Hi guys I'm thinking of selling my Bayliner 2052 cuddy to buy a bowrider.I've never had or been in one. I was wondering the thoughts of the members here what you guys think of bowriders. In the past,i've had the occasional night on board but now the cuddy seems to be used for storage and a lot of wasted space,although great for the toilet use. I rather like the idea of being able to sit up front with nothing infront to block the view and to achieve a little more floor space for friends rather than all sitting at the back. So, any pro's and cons.I'm talking trailerable 20-22 foot. Does it perhaps get a bit too cold to sit up front as your going along?,too bouncy a ride? too wet from splash? Any thoughts would be greatful Thankyou Simon How do you use your boat inland lake, great lake, or sea ? We live on a small inland lake (although the biggest in 3 surrounding counties) We would not have anything but a bowrider. You can get a little wet when its choppy out but when your out there to tube your going to get wet anyways right? In my opinion its no colder in the bow then it is in the cockpit. All my kids (I have 6) fight to be in the bow when we go out |
#3
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On Sep 20, 5:16 pm, gilly wrote:
Hi guys I'm thinking of selling my Bayliner 2052 cuddy to buy a bowrider.I've never had or been in one. Got "mine" last season. Main benefit ...my wife liked our friends' so much, she chipped in 1/3 the cost towards "ours". Other benefits ... I trailer the boat ... it's real easy to run it up onto the trailer, go forward, climb out, winch. Extra seating. With a passenger up front, the ride is smoother, on plane faster and runs on plane at lower RPMs. Handy for fishing. And the passengers up front get a laugh (read splash) if I hit a wake slow and just right. And there is a cover for early morning, late evening when it cools off. Easy to put down the anchor. I never did like walking out on that bow with anchor in hand, and that space under the deck ended up just storage for "junk" And the size you're looking at, can incorporate a head. |
#4
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gilly wrote:
Hi guys I'm thinking of selling my Bayliner 2052 cuddy to buy a bowrider.I've never had or been in one. I was wondering the thoughts of the members here what you guys think of bowriders. In the past,i've had the occasional night on board but now the cuddy seems to be used for storage and a lot of wasted space,although great for the toilet use. I rather like the idea of being able to sit up front with nothing infront to block the view and to achieve a little more floor space for friends rather than all sitting at the back. So, any pro's and cons.I'm talking trailerable 20-22 foot. Does it perhaps get a bit too cold to sit up front as your going along?,too bouncy a ride? too wet from splash? Any thoughts would be greatful Thankyou Simon I had an 18' bowrider for several years when I lived, and boated, up north on an inland lake. They are great for running around with a group of friends. We rarely got splashed but it will happen in about any trailerable boat in the right conditions. Here's the Cadillac of bowriders. This seems to be their smallest model that offers a head. http://www.crownline.com/models/models.php?model=240_ls Dan |
#5
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Ours is a 24' Bowrider and we tow it 'a fair distance' just about
every summer. We have never had it in any real rough water, but we've been in a bit of a chop and never had a problem with it being too difficult to stay in the bow. And as another person suggested, at this size we still have a hide-away for a porti-potty! Lots of floor space for everyone and a swim pad on the back for sunning when the boat isn't moving. All in all, Bowriders are a great choice. This is our third one, and the next will be a LARGER one. (27-29' range). Glenn S. Harpers Ferry, WV FOR SALE: 2003 Baja 242 Islander (Bowrider) http://ICanHelp56.homestead.com/Baja001.html |
#6
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On Sep 20, 2:16?pm, gilly wrote:
Hi guys I'm thinking of selling my Bayliner 2052 cuddy to buy a bowrider.I've never had or been in one. I was wondering the thoughts of the members here what you guys think of bowriders. In the past,i've had the occasional night on board but now the cuddy seems to be used for storage and a lot of wasted space,although great for the toilet use. I rather like the idea of being able to sit up front with nothing infront to block the view and to achieve a little more floor space for friends rather than all sitting at the back. So, any pro's and cons.I'm talking trailerable 20-22 foot. Does it perhaps get a bit too cold to sit up front as your going along?,too bouncy a ride? too wet from splash? Any thoughts would be greatful Thankyou Simon The lack of a foredeck makes a bowrider less suitable for rough water than a traditional runabout. If you never boat in rough conditions, not as big a deal. Several bowriders are available with a configuration where there are two "consoles:, one to starboard with the helm and one to port that opens up to reveal a marine toilet or porta-potti. |
#7
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Chuck Gould wrote:
On Sep 20, 2:16?pm, gilly wrote: Hi guys I'm thinking of selling my Bayliner 2052 cuddy to buy a bowrider.I've never had or been in one. I was wondering the thoughts of the members here what you guys think of bowriders. In the past,i've had the occasional night on board but now the cuddy seems to be used for storage and a lot of wasted space,although great for the toilet use. I rather like the idea of being able to sit up front with nothing infront to block the view and to achieve a little more floor space for friends rather than all sitting at the back. So, any pro's and cons.I'm talking trailerable 20-22 foot. Does it perhaps get a bit too cold to sit up front as your going along?,too bouncy a ride? too wet from splash? Any thoughts would be greatful Thankyou Simon The lack of a foredeck makes a bowrider less suitable for rough water than a traditional runabout. If you never boat in rough conditions, not as big a deal. Several bowriders are available with a configuration where there are two "consoles:, one to starboard with the helm and one to port that opens up to reveal a marine toilet or porta-potti. No foredeck, therefore not suitable for rough water: http://www.gradywhite.com/336/ And, of course, open stern ocean racing sailboats are not suitable for rough water, either: http://www.open30.org/galleries.htm Now, *some* powerboats with no foredeck are not suitable for rough water, but some are. Grady makes a 27' bowrider that can take on the same sea conditions as its 27' center console. Same hull. |
#8
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On Sep 20, 6:07?pm, HK wrote:
Chuck Gould wrote: On Sep 20, 2:16?pm, gilly wrote: Hi guys I'm thinking of selling my Bayliner 2052 cuddy to buy a bowrider.I've never had or been in one. I was wondering the thoughts of the members here what you guys think of bowriders. In the past,i've had the occasional night on board but now the cuddy seems to be used for storage and a lot of wasted space,although great for the toilet use. I rather like the idea of being able to sit up front with nothing infront to block the view and to achieve a little more floor space for friends rather than all sitting at the back. So, any pro's and cons.I'm talking trailerable 20-22 foot. Does it perhaps get a bit too cold to sit up front as your going along?,too bouncy a ride? too wet from splash? Any thoughts would be greatful Thankyou Simon The lack of a foredeck makes a bowrider less suitable for rough water than a traditional runabout. If you never boat in rough conditions, not as big a deal. Several bowriders are available with a configuration where there are two "consoles:, one to starboard with the helm and one to port that opens up to reveal a marine toilet or porta-potti. No foredeck, therefore not suitable for rough water: http://www.gradywhite.com/336/ And, of course, open stern ocean racing sailboats are not suitable for rough water, either: http://www.open30.org/galleries.htm Now, *some* powerboats with no foredeck are not suitable for rough water, but some are. Grady makes a 27' bowrider that can take on the same sea conditions as its 27' center console. Same hull.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - If you read s-l-o-w-l-y and carefully you will note that I compared the bow rider to a "traditional runabout" and gave the nod for rough water suitability to the latter. No attempt was made to state that any boat without a foredeck is less suitable for rough water use than any boat with. |
#9
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Chuck Gould wrote:
On Sep 20, 6:07?pm, HK wrote: Chuck Gould wrote: On Sep 20, 2:16?pm, gilly wrote: Hi guys I'm thinking of selling my Bayliner 2052 cuddy to buy a bowrider.I've never had or been in one. I was wondering the thoughts of the members here what you guys think of bowriders. In the past,i've had the occasional night on board but now the cuddy seems to be used for storage and a lot of wasted space,although great for the toilet use. I rather like the idea of being able to sit up front with nothing infront to block the view and to achieve a little more floor space for friends rather than all sitting at the back. So, any pro's and cons.I'm talking trailerable 20-22 foot. Does it perhaps get a bit too cold to sit up front as your going along?,too bouncy a ride? too wet from splash? Any thoughts would be greatful Thankyou Simon The lack of a foredeck makes a bowrider less suitable for rough water than a traditional runabout. If you never boat in rough conditions, not as big a deal. Several bowriders are available with a configuration where there are two "consoles:, one to starboard with the helm and one to port that opens up to reveal a marine toilet or porta-potti. No foredeck, therefore not suitable for rough water: http://www.gradywhite.com/336/ And, of course, open stern ocean racing sailboats are not suitable for rough water, either: http://www.open30.org/galleries.htm Now, *some* powerboats with no foredeck are not suitable for rough water, but some are. Grady makes a 27' bowrider that can take on the same sea conditions as its 27' center console. Same hull.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - If you read s-l-o-w-l-y and carefully you will note that I compared the bow rider to a "traditional runabout" and gave the nod for rough water suitability to the latter. No attempt was made to state that any boat without a foredeck is less suitable for rough water use than any boat with. What's a "traditional runabout"? |
#10
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On Fri, 21 Sep 2007 10:48:01 -0400, HK wrote:
What's a "traditional runabout"? As usual, Google is your friend: http://images.google.com/images?hl=e...Im ages&gbv=2 |
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