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Minor miracle?
I called my insurance man about insurance for my 1979 22 ft Starcraft. He said anything under 175 HP was covered under the household insurance, and 170 HP was under the limit. Casady |
Minor miracle?
"Richard Casady" wrote in message ... I called my insurance man about insurance for my 1979 22 ft Starcraft. He said anything under 175 HP was covered under the household insurance, and 170 HP was under the limit. Casady The only problem with those household insurance riders for boats is that they rarely cover oil or fuel spill protection, if that's important to you. Eisboch |
Minor miracle?
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Minor miracle?
On Sat, 23 Aug 2008 19:50:22 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: On Sat, 23 Aug 2008 18:15:07 GMT, (Richard Casady) wrote: I called my insurance man about insurance for my 1979 22 ft Starcraft. He said anything under 175 HP was covered under the household insurance, and 170 HP was under the limit. Word of advice - find out exactly what the policy covers for your boat and what it pays in the event of total loss. Been there, done that and it wasn't pretty. The boat cost me about two days income. Casady |
Minor miracle?
On Sat, 23 Aug 2008 14:23:19 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:
"Richard Casady" wrote in message .. . I called my insurance man about insurance for my 1979 22 ft Starcraft. He said anything under 175 HP was covered under the household insurance, and 170 HP was under the limit. Casady The only problem with those household insurance riders for boats is that they rarely cover oil or fuel spill protection, if that's important to you. Eisboch Twenty foot deep Spirit Lake Iowa doesn't get waves big enough to sink a 22 foot boat. Its only five miles wide, not much fetch. There are more automobiles on the bottom of that lake than boats. Ice fishing. It is actually realistic to plan on not sinking. If I decide to take it down the Mississippi and through the ICW, I may rethink that. Casady |
Minor miracle?
"Richard Casady" wrote in message ... On Sat, 23 Aug 2008 14:23:19 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote: "Richard Casady" wrote in message . .. I called my insurance man about insurance for my 1979 22 ft Starcraft. He said anything under 175 HP was covered under the household insurance, and 170 HP was under the limit. Casady The only problem with those household insurance riders for boats is that they rarely cover oil or fuel spill protection, if that's important to you. Eisboch Twenty foot deep Spirit Lake Iowa doesn't get waves big enough to sink a 22 foot boat. Its only five miles wide, not much fetch. There are more automobiles on the bottom of that lake than boats. Ice fishing. It is actually realistic to plan on not sinking. If I decide to take it down the Mississippi and through the ICW, I may rethink that. Casady Your call. You don't have to sink a boat to get a half million dollar clean up bill from the government. Realistically, a small outboard powered boat is a safer risk than an inboard. If the oil pan rusts out or develops a leak, on an I/O, dumps the oil into the bilge and your trusty bilge pump promptly discharges it overboard .... *that's* when you may have problems without oil spill coverage. Eisboch |
Minor miracle?
On Sun, 24 Aug 2008 12:18:34 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:
If the oil pan rusts out or develops a leak, Oil pans don't rust out around these parts. No salt. Casady |
Minor miracle?
Richard Casady wrote:
On Sun, 24 Aug 2008 12:18:34 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote: If the oil pan rusts out or develops a leak, Oil pans don't rust out around these parts. No salt. Casady As he said, do what you think is in your best interest, but the law is written so that ANY gas/oil that will leave a sheen on the water can result in HIGH fines. Technically if you overfill your gas tank and a ounce of gas ends up in the water, you could face an outrageous fine. This is the reason why all marinas I ever visit require the boat owner to fill their tanks. That way they are not responsible for overfilling a tank. |
Minor miracle?
On Aug 24, 5:03*pm, RPSIII wrote:
Richard Casady wrote: On Sun, 24 Aug 2008 12:18:34 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote: If the oil pan rusts out or develops a leak, Oil pans don't rust out around these parts. No salt. Casady As he said, do what you think is in your best interest, but the law is written so that ANY gas/oil that will leave a sheen on the water can result in HIGH fines. *Technically if you overfill your gas tank and a ounce of gas ends up in the water, you could face an outrageous fine. This is the reason why all marinas I ever visit require the boat owner to fill their tanks. *That way they are not responsible for overfilling a tank. Does the EPA and CG respond to and fine folks in GA for overfilling the gas tanks on their boats? We have the option of filling our tanks ourselves or having the dock attendant do it for us. |
Minor miracle?
JimH wrote:
On Aug 24, 5:03 pm, RPSIII wrote: Richard Casady wrote: On Sun, 24 Aug 2008 12:18:34 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote: If the oil pan rusts out or develops a leak, Oil pans don't rust out around these parts. No salt. Casady As he said, do what you think is in your best interest, but the law is written so that ANY gas/oil that will leave a sheen on the water can result in HIGH fines. Technically if you overfill your gas tank and a ounce of gas ends up in the water, you could face an outrageous fine. This is the reason why all marinas I ever visit require the boat owner to fill their tanks. That way they are not responsible for overfilling a tank. Does the EPA and CG respond to and fine folks in GA for overfilling the gas tanks on their boats? We have the option of filling our tanks ourselves or having the dock attendant do it for us. Let's be real here...how often is Reggie "filling the tank" on his imaginary bubble boat to drive around that dried up lake? Parker puts fairly large gasoline tanks in its boats. My 21-footer has a 100-gallon tank. I keep it about half full. Another 50 gallons of fuel is another 350 pounds or so... No need to be carrying that much extra weight. |
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