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#1
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On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 08:33:46 -0500, HK wrote:
Oh, it is going to be fun watching your false teeth bounce out of your big mouth this summer, when you run your "too small for the Bay" fishing boat against the hard chop. Better wear a neck brace, too. Isn't John's boat about the same size as your ocean going, all weather LTP ? |
#2
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Wayne.B wrote:
On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 08:33:46 -0500, HK wrote: Oh, it is going to be fun watching your false teeth bounce out of your big mouth this summer, when you run your "too small for the Bay" fishing boat against the hard chop. Better wear a neck brace, too. Isn't John's boat about the same size as your ocean going, all weather LTP ? Nope. John's new boat would fit inside mine. My Parker is only 21' long, but if you put the two boats next to each other, mine looks like a battleship and his looks about the size and configuration of my old Sea Pro. Remember, I owned several boats that exact size. The Parker has a much higher bow, higher sides, more deadrise and, importantly in a small boat, it weighs at least a half ton more. BTW, the center part of my transom is exactly the same height as the one on Herring's boat...about 25 inches. The sides of the transom on my boat are much higher. The motorwells on most small boats are next to useless in stopping an onflow from the stern. What matters is the boat's ability to drain fast. How would I know this? Why...my last Sea Pro had a motorwell about the size of the one on Herring's new boat. When a large stern wave wants to come aboard, it does...it simply fills up the little well and then fluid dynamics help the rest of the water aboard. I had a lot of fun with my Sea Pro on the Bay, but not when it was choppy. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 17:29:18 -0500, HK wrote:
Wayne.B wrote: On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 08:33:46 -0500, HK wrote: Oh, it is going to be fun watching your false teeth bounce out of your big mouth this summer, when you run your "too small for the Bay" fishing boat against the hard chop. Better wear a neck brace, too. Isn't John's boat about the same size as your ocean going, all weather LTP ? Nope. John's new boat would fit inside mine. My Parker is only 21' long, but if you put the two boats next to each other, mine looks like a battleship and his looks about the size and configuration of my old Sea Pro. Remember, I owned several boats that exact size. The Parker has a much higher bow, higher sides, more deadrise and, importantly in a small boat, it weighs at least a half ton more. BTW, the center part of my transom is exactly the same height as the one on Herring's boat...about 25 inches. The sides of the transom on my boat are much higher. The motorwells on most small boats are next to useless in stopping an onflow from the stern. What matters is the boat's ability to drain fast. How would I know this? Why...my last Sea Pro had a motorwell about the size of the one on Herring's new boat. When a large stern wave wants to come aboard, it does...it simply fills up the little well and then fluid dynamics help the rest of the water aboard. I had a lot of fun with my Sea Pro on the Bay, but not when it was choppy. I'm sure that 21'er is much closer to 30'. Hell, your 25'er was about 34', no? -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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John H. wrote:
On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 17:29:18 -0500, HK wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 08:33:46 -0500, HK wrote: Oh, it is going to be fun watching your false teeth bounce out of your big mouth this summer, when you run your "too small for the Bay" fishing boat against the hard chop. Better wear a neck brace, too. Isn't John's boat about the same size as your ocean going, all weather LTP ? Nope. John's new boat would fit inside mine. My Parker is only 21' long, but if you put the two boats next to each other, mine looks like a battleship and his looks about the size and configuration of my old Sea Pro. Remember, I owned several boats that exact size. The Parker has a much higher bow, higher sides, more deadrise and, importantly in a small boat, it weighs at least a half ton more. BTW, the center part of my transom is exactly the same height as the one on Herring's boat...about 25 inches. The sides of the transom on my boat are much higher. The motorwells on most small boats are next to useless in stopping an onflow from the stern. What matters is the boat's ability to drain fast. How would I know this? Why...my last Sea Pro had a motorwell about the size of the one on Herring's new boat. When a large stern wave wants to come aboard, it does...it simply fills up the little well and then fluid dynamics help the rest of the water aboard. I had a lot of fun with my Sea Pro on the Bay, but not when it was choppy. I'm sure that 21'er is much closer to 30'. Hell, your 25'er was about 34', no? The 25' Parker I had was 25' from the bow to the stern, excluding the pulpit and the motor bracket. If memory serves, the motor bracket extended off the transom about 30 inches, give or take, and the pulpit was at least 24" out from the bow. I'd guess the 25-footer was really about 31' long excluding the motor. if you consider the pulpit and bracket. If you add in the motor, the damn thing was about 33' from the front of the pulpit to the back of the motor. The 21-footer has no pulpit or bracket. It is 21' long x 8'6" at its widest point. The bare hull weighs 2800 pounds, and the deadrise at the transom is 21 degrees. The fuel tank holds 100 gallons, for another nearly 700 pounds of mass when full. Your new boat is 18'6" long x 8' wide at its widest point. Your bare hull according to the manufacturer's web sire is 1650 pounds, and the deadrise is 19 degrees. I believe your fuel tank holds 40 gallons, for another 280 pounds of mass when full. Additionally, the Parker is substantially larger and deeper at the bow and throughout the boat. As I stated, your new boat will easily fit inside my Parker. Nothing wrong with smaller boats. I've certainly had my fun in them. But my old SeaPro was about the same dimensions as your new boat, and I know for damned sure that even the slightest chop was something to consider. Boat weight helps out there. If you frequent the mid-Bay, you will find out. |
#5
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On Feb 29, 6:11*pm, John H. wrote:
On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 17:29:18 -0500, HK wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 08:33:46 -0500, HK wrote: Oh, it is going to be fun watching your false teeth bounce out of your big mouth this summer, when you run your "too small for the Bay" fishing boat against the hard chop. Better wear a neck brace, too. Isn't John's boat about the same size as your ocean going, all weather LTP ? Nope. John's new boat would fit inside mine. My Parker is only 21' long, but if you put the two boats next to each other, mine looks like a battleship and his looks about the size and configuration of my old Sea Pro. Remember, I owned several boats that exact size. The Parker has a much higher bow, higher sides, more deadrise and, importantly in a small boat, it weighs at least a half ton more. BTW, the center part of my transom is exactly the same height as the one on Herring's boat...about 25 inches. The sides of the transom on my boat are much higher. The motorwells on most small boats are next to useless in stopping an onflow from the stern. What matters is the boat's ability to drain fast. How would I know this? Why...my last Sea Pro had a motorwell about the size of the one on Herring's new boat. When a large stern wave wants to come aboard, it does...it simply fills up the little well and then fluid dynamics help the rest of the water aboard. I had a lot of fun with my Sea Pro on the Bay, but not when it was choppy.. I'm sure that 21'er is much closer to 30'. Hell, your 25'er was about 34', no? -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking."- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Might as well be 100 feet, the way Harry lies. |
#6
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On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 17:29:18 -0500, HK wrote:
I had a lot of fun with my Sea Pro on the Bay, but not when it was choppy. Yes. Skipper was always *very* concerned about its sea keeping abilities. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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Wayne.B wrote:
On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 17:29:18 -0500, HK wrote: I had a lot of fun with my Sea Pro on the Bay, but not when it was choppy. Yes. Skipper was always *very* concerned about its sea keeping abilities. D'oh. It wasn't the seakeeping, it was the chop. You can't possibly be as dumb as that last remark of yours. Can you? |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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John H. wrote:
On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 07:23:55 -0500, HK wrote: There were a few questions a couple of weeks ago about umbrella rigs. Here's a commercial webpage that shows a variety of umbrella rigs, their components, variations, et cetera. http://www.cnksal****ertackle.com/home.html tandem rigs with parachutes or bucktails. Only way to go. Of course, if you did more than 'drift fishing' within twelve feet of the marina, you'd know that. JohnH, What is the largest striper or is it striper you have caught. |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
John H. wrote: On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 07:23:55 -0500, HK wrote: There were a few questions a couple of weeks ago about umbrella rigs. Here's a commercial webpage that shows a variety of umbrella rigs, their components, variations, et cetera. http://www.cnksal****ertackle.com/home.html tandem rigs with parachutes or bucktails. Only way to go. Of course, if you did more than 'drift fishing' within twelve feet of the marina, you'd know that. JohnH, What is the largest striper or is it striper you have caught. Me 42" at the Rock Pile on the Maryland side of the Potomac River about 10 miles up from the Chesapeake Bay. This was about 33 years ago. |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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BAR wrote:
Reginald P. Smithers III wrote: John H. wrote: On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 07:23:55 -0500, HK wrote: There were a few questions a couple of weeks ago about umbrella rigs. Here's a commercial webpage that shows a variety of umbrella rigs, their components, variations, et cetera. http://www.cnksal****ertackle.com/home.html tandem rigs with parachutes or bucktails. Only way to go. Of course, if you did more than 'drift fishing' within twelve feet of the marina, you'd know that. JohnH, What is the largest striper or is it striper you have caught. Me 42" at the Rock Pile on the Maryland side of the Potomac River about 10 miles up from the Chesapeake Bay. This was about 33 years ago. How would you rate their fighting abilities? Any nice jump and tail wags trying to throw the lure? |
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