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"John H." wrote in message
... On Sat, 12 Jan 2008 23:27:24 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: "Calif Bill" wrote in message ... "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message ... wrote in message ... On Jan 11, 9:02 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: wrote in message ... On Jan 11, 8:34 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: wrote in message ... Finally going to make the plunge and buy an aluminum boat, but i am confused. Our goal is to buy a boat that will last for many years to come and also turn heads when on the water. The more i talk to salesman the more BS i hear. What should i be looking for as far as the quality of the welds, some look like art and some look like my son who is 12 tried to weld for the first time. Does the apperance of the weld matter? We are looking at a 200 Sea Runner Hewes Craft right now, any comments would help at this point Thanks I own a Lund, and the company makes a big selling point of the fact that their aluminum hulls are double riveted. Welding is not mentioned anywhere in their literature, as far as I've noticed. I've been beating the crap out of the boat since 1999 and it's as tight as the day it was new. www.lundboats.com Thanks for the feedback I appreciate your coment about rivetted boats but my wife said noway to riveted boats, he dad had one and it always leaked. Infact you should have seen the dirty looks she gave one of the salesman when he was trying to sale us on a riveted boat. What would you look for or like to see as far as welds? ================ I have no idea what to look for with welds. Tell your wife that her dad bought a ****ty boat, and she should not judge all riveted boats based on her father's bad judgement and low budget. If she's such a shmexpert, maybe she should be designing boats.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I would appreciate it if you didn't talk about her that way. You don't know her. ================== I don't know her, but based on the information you provided, I know something ABOUT her. Here's an example of what I know about her: She thinks a handmade pastry from a fancy bakery is identical to a frozen Sara Lee pastry with the same name, like "tiramisu". Maybe her dad bought a Lund and the rivets leaked. You know nothing about her or the boat her dad bought. Except that the boat had leaking rivets. You are correct. The leaky boat could've been a Lund. But, that doesn't change the absolute perfection of my analogy. His wife thinks all things within a given category are identical. Hopefully, that doesn't extend to men. I sure wouldn't want to put a splotch on that perfect image of yourself, but you might just consider a little apology. -- John H I'm trying to urge him gently to YES his wife during the boat shopping process, but ignore her advice. She's shown that she can't make sense of features. Next, she'll be saying her grandpa got sick from eating a sandwich that sat in the sun all day on his boat, so the new boat shouldn't have room for sandwiches. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Jan 13, 10:26*am, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
"John H." wrote in message ... On Sat, 12 Jan 2008 23:27:24 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: "Calif Bill" wrote in message ... "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message ... wrote in message .... On Jan 11, 9:02 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: wrote in message ... On Jan 11, 8:34 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: wrote in message ... Finally going to make the plunge and buy an aluminum boat, but i am confused. Our goal is to buy a boat that will last for many years to come and also turn heads when on the water. The more i talk to salesman the more BS i hear. What should i be looking for as far as the quality of the welds, some look like art and some look like my son who is 12 tried to weld for the first time. Does the apperance of the weld matter? We are looking at a 200 Sea Runner Hewes Craft right now, any comments would help at this point Thanks I own a Lund, and the company makes a big selling point of the fact that their aluminum hulls are double riveted. Welding is not mentioned anywhere in their literature, as far as I've noticed. I've been beating the crap out of the boat since 1999 and it's as tight as the day it was new. www.lundboats.com Thanks for the feedback I appreciate your coment about rivetted boats but my wife said noway to riveted boats, he dad had one and it always leaked. Infact you should have seen the dirty looks she gave one of the salesman when he was trying to sale us on a riveted boat. What would you look for or like to see as far as welds? ================ I have no idea what to look for with welds. Tell your wife that her dad bought a ****ty boat, and she should not judge all riveted boats based on her father's bad judgement and low budget. If she's such a shmexpert, maybe she should be designing boats.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I would appreciate it if you didn't talk about her that way. *You don't know her. ================== I don't know her, but based on the information you provided, I know something ABOUT her. Here's an example of what I know about her: She thinks a handmade pastry from a fancy bakery is identical to a frozen Sara Lee pastry with the same name, like "tiramisu". Maybe her dad bought a Lund and the rivets leaked. *You know nothing about her or the boat her dad bought. *Except that the boat had leaking rivets. You are correct. The leaky boat could've been a Lund. But, that doesn't change the absolute perfection of my analogy. His wife thinks all things within a given category are identical. Hopefully, that doesn't extend to men. I sure wouldn't want to put a splotch on that perfect image of yourself, but you might just consider a little apology. -- John H I'm trying to urge him gently to YES his wife during the boat shopping process, but ignore her advice. She's shown that she can't make sense of features. Next, she'll be saying her grandpa got sick from eating a sandwich that sat in the sun all day on his boat, so the new boat shouldn't have room for sandwiches.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Don't bother Joe. Your welcome has obvously soured him to the group, he has probably moved on.. Too bad really, he may have actually been a boater with something to add here. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sun, 13 Jan 2008 15:26:07 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"
wrote: "John H." wrote in message .. . On Sat, 12 Jan 2008 23:27:24 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: "Calif Bill" wrote in message ... "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message ... wrote in message ... On Jan 11, 9:02 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: wrote in message ... On Jan 11, 8:34 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: wrote in message ... Finally going to make the plunge and buy an aluminum boat, but i am confused. Our goal is to buy a boat that will last for many years to come and also turn heads when on the water. The more i talk to salesman the more BS i hear. What should i be looking for as far as the quality of the welds, some look like art and some look like my son who is 12 tried to weld for the first time. Does the apperance of the weld matter? We are looking at a 200 Sea Runner Hewes Craft right now, any comments would help at this point Thanks I own a Lund, and the company makes a big selling point of the fact that their aluminum hulls are double riveted. Welding is not mentioned anywhere in their literature, as far as I've noticed. I've been beating the crap out of the boat since 1999 and it's as tight as the day it was new. www.lundboats.com Thanks for the feedback I appreciate your coment about rivetted boats but my wife said noway to riveted boats, he dad had one and it always leaked. Infact you should have seen the dirty looks she gave one of the salesman when he was trying to sale us on a riveted boat. What would you look for or like to see as far as welds? ================ I have no idea what to look for with welds. Tell your wife that her dad bought a ****ty boat, and she should not judge all riveted boats based on her father's bad judgement and low budget. If she's such a shmexpert, maybe she should be designing boats.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I would appreciate it if you didn't talk about her that way. You don't know her. ================== I don't know her, but based on the information you provided, I know something ABOUT her. Here's an example of what I know about her: She thinks a handmade pastry from a fancy bakery is identical to a frozen Sara Lee pastry with the same name, like "tiramisu". Maybe her dad bought a Lund and the rivets leaked. You know nothing about her or the boat her dad bought. Except that the boat had leaking rivets. You are correct. The leaky boat could've been a Lund. But, that doesn't change the absolute perfection of my analogy. His wife thinks all things within a given category are identical. Hopefully, that doesn't extend to men. I sure wouldn't want to put a splotch on that perfect image of yourself, but you might just consider a little apology. -- John H I'm trying to urge him gently to YES his wife during the boat shopping process, but ignore her advice. She's shown that she can't make sense of features. Next, she'll be saying her grandpa got sick from eating a sandwich that sat in the sun all day on his boat, so the new boat shouldn't have room for sandwiches. You should hang a mirror from your monitor so you could admire yourself more often. Or is it already there? -- John H |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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"John H." wrote in message
... I'm trying to urge him gently to YES his wife during the boat shopping process, but ignore her advice. She's shown that she can't make sense of features. Next, she'll be saying her grandpa got sick from eating a sandwich that sat in the sun all day on his boat, so the new boat shouldn't have room for sandwiches. You should hang a mirror from your monitor so you could admire yourself more often. Or is it already there? -- John H You said that earlier. You're repeating yourself. Ask the mrs to give you something to keep you occupied. Maybe a box of animal crackers. |
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