![]() |
Another quality boat manufacturer sells out.
"Don White" wrote in message ... "Eisboch" wrote in message ... "Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote in message . .. Diesels definitely make financial sense is if you are putting lots of hours on the engines and plan on keeping the boat/car/truck for a long time. They cost less in fuel and cost substantially less in maintenance $/hrs of use, but you need the high usage to offset the initial cost. Last May I decided I didn't need a big pickup truck anymore so I traded in a '05 Ford 4x4 Superduty diesel F-350 crew cab for a '07 Ford Ranger 4x4 extended cab with a 4.0L gas engine. The 325 hp diesel truck weighed over 7,000 lbs and got 17 mpg around town and 19-20 mpg on the highway. The Ranger, at about half the weight and with just over 200 hp gets poorer mileage, in both around town and highway driving. Eisboch Yeah but... just think how cool you look sporting around town now. You did get a red Ranger? Of course not. Eisboch |
Another quality boat manufacturer sells out.
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Tue, 6 Nov 2007 07:13:25 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote in message m... Diesels definitely make financial sense is if you are putting lots of hours on the engines and plan on keeping the boat/car/truck for a long time. They cost less in fuel and cost substantially less in maintenance $/hrs of use, but you need the high usage to offset the initial cost. Last May I decided I didn't need a big pickup truck anymore so I traded in a '05 Ford 4x4 Superduty diesel F-350 crew cab for a '07 Ford Ranger 4x4 extended cab with a 4.0L gas engine. The 325 hp diesel truck weighed over 7,000 lbs and got 17 mpg around town and 19-20 mpg on the highway. The Ranger, at about half the weight and with just over 200 hp gets poorer mileage, in both around town and highway driving. If my 7.3 had not been totaled, I'd still be driving it. This F-150 with the 5.4 Triton, 3.85 "tow" package sucks in gas milage and in horsepower. I hate it. I could have told you that. I had an 99' expedition. Same vehicle and the power and fuel consumption both sucked. |
Another quality boat manufacturer sells out.
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 08:49:38 -0800, Chuck Gould
wrote: On Nov 5, 5:24?pm, " JimH" ask wrote: "Wayne.B" wrote in message ... On Mon, 5 Nov 2007 19:32:24 -0500, " JimH" ask wrote: I've heard rumors of some small amount engaged in on the Pacific, but have always been leery of same. Sort of like tostitos in Kansas..... I guess I need to see your definition of 'sport fishing'. You're not likely to be convinced but on the east coast it is commonly meant to be "deep sea fishing", or going out off the continental shelf to the "canyons". It takes a decent boat to go out there and back in the windy conditions which frequently prevail. Just my 2 cents worth. I believe you. I just did not know what you East Coast snobs were referring to. Imagine this..........sport fishing in the Gulf, the Great Lakes, the Pacific. Wow, how can I think such a thing exists. Eh? Shhh, Jim. Don't burst that bubble. Don't you know that a 15 knot breeze on the E Coast blows 2-3 times as hard as anywhere else (and according to some sources generates 11-foot breakers)? The sea itself is particularly nasty, erratic, and unforgiving in the western Atlantic, so only the manliest of men in the roughest, toughest hand laid hulls inspected by "old guys" dare venture out? No boat suitable for use on the E Coast could even be considered desirable on any other body of water, and nothing built outside of Jersey or the Carolinas has any business trying to tackle the world's most challenging boating conditions. :-) Welcome to the Dark Side. |
Another quality boat manufacturer sells out.
"Eisboch" wrote in message ... "Don White" wrote in message ... "Eisboch" wrote in message ... "Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote in message . .. Diesels definitely make financial sense is if you are putting lots of hours on the engines and plan on keeping the boat/car/truck for a long time. They cost less in fuel and cost substantially less in maintenance $/hrs of use, but you need the high usage to offset the initial cost. Last May I decided I didn't need a big pickup truck anymore so I traded in a '05 Ford 4x4 Superduty diesel F-350 crew cab for a '07 Ford Ranger 4x4 extended cab with a 4.0L gas engine. The 325 hp diesel truck weighed over 7,000 lbs and got 17 mpg around town and 19-20 mpg on the highway. The Ranger, at about half the weight and with just over 200 hp gets poorer mileage, in both around town and highway driving. Eisboch Yeah but... just think how cool you look sporting around town now. You did get a red Ranger? Of course not. Eisboch I see... you probably had to colour co-ordinate it to one of your trailers. ;-) |
Another quality boat manufacturer sells out.
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 09:01:18 -0500, Gene Kearns
wrote: There's a decent looking Carolina 28 docked across the marina from us. I assume they are made somewhere around here. They are built in Edenton. http://maps.google.com/maps?q=Edento...i=map&ct=title Thanks. We drove through Edenton the other day while we were out exploring the area. Nice little town. There are boat builders hiding behind every tree in this part of the world. What kind of reputation do the Carolina's have around here? |
Another quality boat manufacturer sells out.
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 08:49:38 -0800, Chuck Gould
wrote: I believe you. I just did not know what you East Coast snobs were referring to. Imagine this..........sport fishing in the Gulf, the Great Lakes, the Pacific. Wow, how can I think such a thing exists. Eh? Shhh, Jim. Don't burst that bubble. Don't you know that a 15 knot breeze on the E Coast blows 2-3 times as hard as anywhere else (and according to some sources generates 11-foot breakers)? The sea itself is particularly nasty, erratic, and unforgiving in the western Atlantic, so only the manliest of men in the roughest, toughest hand laid hulls inspected by "old guys" dare venture out? No boat suitable for use on the E Coast could even be considered desirable on any other body of water, and nothing built outside of Jersey or the Carolinas has any business trying to tackle the world's most challenging boating conditions. :-) You have been in the NorthWet entirely to long, and Jim is just being Eerie (again). I once had a business colleague from Indiana who was always waxing poetic about his state. One day I told him that he was no doubt correct, but that if I were to move to Indiana I'd want to be in the mountains or along the sea shore. It took him a moment to get my point. All that by way of saying that the great Pacific NorthWet could meet those requirements easily, which means that they need to be ammended - to include sunshine. |
Another quality boat manufacturer sells out.
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 09:21:03 -0500, Gene Kearns
wrote: According to Webster: sport·fish·ing (spôrt'fi(sh'i(ng, spo-rt'-) pronunciation n. The sport of catching large salt water game fish using a rod and reel and an offshore sportfishing type boat epitomized by those constructed along the coastal regions of North and South Carolina. Chuckle. We are docked with about 50 of them right now and they're building a bunch more right down the road. |
Another quality boat manufacturer sells out.
Wayne.B wrote:
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 08:49:38 -0800, Chuck Gould wrote: I believe you. I just did not know what you East Coast snobs were referring to. Imagine this..........sport fishing in the Gulf, the Great Lakes, the Pacific. Wow, how can I think such a thing exists. Eh? Shhh, Jim. Don't burst that bubble. Don't you know that a 15 knot breeze on the E Coast blows 2-3 times as hard as anywhere else (and according to some sources generates 11-foot breakers)? The sea itself is particularly nasty, erratic, and unforgiving in the western Atlantic, so only the manliest of men in the roughest, toughest hand laid hulls inspected by "old guys" dare venture out? No boat suitable for use on the E Coast could even be considered desirable on any other body of water, and nothing built outside of Jersey or the Carolinas has any business trying to tackle the world's most challenging boating conditions. :-) You have been in the NorthWet entirely to long, and Jim is just being Eerie (again). I once had a business colleague from Indiana who was always waxing poetic about his state. One day I told him that he was no doubt correct, but that if I were to move to Indiana I'd want to be in the mountains or along the sea shore. It took him a moment to get my point. All that by way of saying that the great Pacific NorthWet could meet those requirements easily, which means that they need to be ammended - to include sunshine. Indiana sucks. Big time. I have been to that state many times, and concluded years ago it really had almost nothing to offer. The little bit of shoreline it has along Lake Michigan incorporates several of the crummiest cities in America. There's hardly a worse place to be in the summer than in inland Indiana. |
Another quality boat manufacturer sells out.
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 17:17:16 -0500, Wayne.B penned the following well
considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: |On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 09:01:18 -0500, Gene Kearns wrote: | |There's a decent looking Carolina 28 docked across the marina from us. |I assume they are made somewhere around here. | |They are built in Edenton. |http://maps.google.com/maps?q=Edento...i=map&ct=title | |Thanks. We drove through Edenton the other day while we were out |exploring the area. Nice little town. There are boat builders hiding |behind every tree in this part of the world. I think there are 120 boat builders in NC. |What kind of reputation do the Carolina's have around here? They are, as far as I know, a pretty good boat. There aren't many of them in my neck of the woods, but they have a good reputation. -- Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. Homepage http://pamandgene.idleplay.net/ Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguide http://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats ----------------- www.Newsgroup-Binaries.com - *Completion*Retention*Speed* Access your favorite newsgroups from home or on the road ----------------- |
Another quality boat manufacturer sells out.
|
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:13 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com