Planing houseboat choices

madman2021

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Dec 17, 2010
Messages
172
Interests are changing and I'm not using either one of my offshore boats for their intended purposes anymore. I do alot of 2-3 day inshore fishing trips and duck hunting in protected mostly shallow water. I've been using my 33 Bertram as base camp and to tow my wellcraft v20 for fishing and my custom tunnel drive for duck hunting. The bertram is just too small and draws too much water. I need a houseboat preferably in the 40-50' range but want one than can get on top and cruise in the 17-23mph range. Pluckebaum is the ideal boat but a little out of my price range. Trying to keep it under $75k. Would prefer an aluminum hull but would also do a 90' and newer fiberglass hull with outboards or inboards. No stern drives. Big block gassers seem to be the norm for these go fast houseboats. Wish there were some more diesel choices available. So far based on my research my choices are Gibson, Bluewater, Harbor master, some Lazy days, Hillburn and pluckebaum. Are there any others I'm missing?
 

Stinnett21

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jun 24, 2012
Messages
456
Wouldn't a 40 - 90 foot houseboat that's able to plane off draw just as much water as the Bertram? The planing houseboat went out of style years ago. Even then it took twin big blocks running near WOT, especially for the size your desiring. Not knocking what your wanting, Just think you are gonna have to compromise on something. In my memory, growing up around the Ohio River in 60s-70s, the only houseboats I remember seeing planing, at least what you could call planing, were small to medium size aluminum houseboats such as the Marinette. Maybe a Gibson but they mostly plowed.
 

Scott Danforth

Grumpy Vintage Moderator still playing with boats
Staff member
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Jul 23, 2011
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47,576
you may want to look up displacment hulls and bow wake speed.

no way a 90' houseboat is a planing hull. its a modified displacement hull, it just has a slightly higher displacement speed than a 20' pontoon.

plus you need to consider the fuel burn of 700-900 hp worth of motors screaming at near WOT to move you at 20mph. BTW, its about 40-50 gallons per hour
 

madman2021

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Dec 17, 2010
Messages
172
My mistake on the size range. I meant 40-50 foot range. I'm well aware of the fuel burn of the big block gassers. My Bertram has twin 454 carbed mercruisers. At 21 knots with the wellcraft in tow and generator running I'm burning 40 GPH combined. I'm only running 1-2 hours out each trip so the fuel burn is almost irrelevant. I've seen a few newer Gibsons in my area in the 40-50 foot range running on the lake. Looks like their running in the 20-25 mph range. Just not wild about a fiberglass house boat. I've seen too many with major rotting deck issues.
 

Sea Rider

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Sep 20, 2008
Messages
12,345
Look for something that can achieve an incredible fast displacement speed along much less fuel consumption rate.

Hapy Boating
 

madman2021

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Dec 17, 2010
Messages
172
I like the pontoon style house boats but not enough freeboard and most have just a single engine. Not good for getting back to my house which is on a long narrow curvey bayou. Definitely need twins. My neighbor struggles to get his 34 manship back there.
 

FrizFreleng

Seaman
Joined
Apr 10, 2012
Messages
58
I am partial to Holiday Mansion. Many available in the 36' - 41' range. Once in a while a 49' comes on the market. Usually twin gassers and they do get up and go.
 

mr 88

Commander
Joined
Nov 3, 2010
Messages
2,122
Look for something that can achieve an incredible fast displacement speed along much less fuel consumption rate.

Hapy Boating
Hahahahahaha.. 50 ' houseboat with any engine [s ] is not going to get less fuel consumption at any displacement speed , including "incredible fast " than his 33' Bert.
 

Texasmark

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Dec 20, 2005
Messages
14,565
I think it was the San Diego area but I was surfing Craigs list boats for sale by owner. 30+' toon, don't know if a tritoon or not pics were side views, had 2 ea new hot dog 300 hp Mercs on it and it was hooked up going by as the photo was snapped. Looked like a bass boat on the pad! I was going to clip the internet address and post it here but didn't know if that was ok or not. Price was $195k as I recall. Soooooo looks like you can have what you want....just need deep enough pockets.
 

ahicks

Captain
Joined
Sep 16, 2013
Messages
3,957
My thought regarding anything like a 40-50' pontoon is that it's going to get the living hell twisted out of it in any kind of weather. I don't know how you would get it rigid enough where that wouldn't be a factor.
 

madman2021

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Dec 17, 2010
Messages
172
My friend has one of those 30+ foot twin engine tritoons with twin 400 mercury verados. It's a speed demon rides pretty good too in a bay chop. Wanna say he paid 250-275k for it. Way out my price range though lol.
 
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