JohnH wrote in message . ..
On Sun, 31 Aug 2003 15:14:46 GMT, Harlan Lachman
wrote:
As a long time sailor, my first powerboat was a Boston Whaler 13.
Although I was too old and the pounding hurt my back (and especially my
older wife's back), I found it a really safe, easy to use craft that
inspired confidence and was great for water skiing, moving around, and
fishing. It disappeared when my older son went off to college after
shoing no interest in the boat.
My younger son will eventually get his first boat, hates sailing, loves
powerboating and I am thinking of a 15' Whaler. A bunch of questions:
How large an engine is big enough to take friends (even large ones)
water skiing or wakeboarding but not too powerful to over power the
boat or encourage needless speeding?
Is a four stroke too heavy for this boat (hp versus weight)?
How much should I expect to pay for a used one in good condition?
TIA,
Harlan
I had a 15' Whaler with a 70 hp Johnson. It ran great. As I recall, the 70hp was
the max allowed for that size boat. That should be enough to get a skier up. It
was pretty fast, I'd guess over 40mph, maybe closer to 50, but I didn't have a
speedo on it. Great boat, lots of fun. Would probably still have it if Army
hadn't needed me overseas and wouldn't ship or store the boat.
Good luck!
John
On the 'Poco Loco' out of Deale, MD
I had a 15' center console, and Jim is right. As it came, I could not stand and
still reach the steering wheel without bending way over. I ended up buying some
good marine plywood and built a 'stand' under the console, raising it about 12".
The steering and other lines were long enough to allow this, and the way the
console was mounted to a frame which was mounted on the deck made the task
fairly easy. Most of the time involved was in waiting for the varnish to dry.
Another advantage was the addition of a couple more cubic feet of storage space
under the console. When I was finished most people thought the boat came that
way.