Yes, but a Jetta will never be a nice MercedesA four year old mercedes can be crap but a 20 year old jetta can be wonderful.
get over brand and get to know the boat.
Yes, but a Jetta will never be a nice MercedesA four year old mercedes can be crap but a 20 year old jetta can be wonderful.
get over brand and get to know the boat.
The Mercedes is just a pile of high priced expensive bits that fail at a higher rate than the Jetta. My Jetta was bulletproof, with the original clutch lasting 240,000 miles, the leather I interior was flawless except that one hole from a tool in my back pocket. Where my neighbors Mercedes sees the service department at least 4 times a year for something failingYes, but a Jetta will never be a nice Mercedes
The point wasn't to compare a Mercedes and a Jetta. It was a metaphor. I have no dog in that fight and would probably never buy one no matter how much money I had.The Mercedes is just a pile of high priced expensive bits that fail at a higher rate than the Jetta. My Jetta was bulletproof, with the original clutch lasting 240,000 miles, the leather I interior was flawless except that one hole from a tool in my back pocket. Where my neighbors Mercedes sees the service department at least 4 times a year for something failing
No, looking for 95 to 05 18-19 foot inboard/outboard 6-8 cyinderA lot of variables, are you going new?
I should add used, from $5K to $7K price range, which in my area is around 1995 to 2002 years.Shopping for a bowrider boat, 17-19 feet for lake use. Any brands besides Bayliner to avoid? I like Sea Ray and Four Winns, don't know much about other brands. Just want decent hull and interior quality
One is a Berlin Buick, the other a Kraut CadillacThe point wasn't to compare a Mercedes and a Jetta.
Yeah, I'd never buy an aluminum boat over a 12' jon boat, with the exception of maybe a Marinette or a large motor yacht. They are fugly, ride loud, ding easily, corrode, and leak at the rivets. The welded structure stress cracks over time as well, especially if you use it any sea. They also often use flotation foam which waterlogs just like a fiberglass boat. They also often have carpeted wood decks, which are just abysmal for a boat that is bound to get wet at all.Based on my 60 plus years as a boat owner, and having worked for marinas for a number of years....in the under 25' length, I would not own anything but an aluminum hull. Far less maintenence, longer hull life, far better down the road resale value, less costly up front, less hp to get performance, easier on fuel. Glass boats are heavy, use more fuel, require much more upkeep, harder to work on, lower resale value. Your boat, your choice, but for my dollar, aluminum all the way.
Many glass boats over 20 yrs old will have hidden rot in there structure, gell coat issues, and will be heavy from soggy flotation. Even if you bought a project boat, an aluminum hull is easier to work on and will cost less to rebuild.
And fiberglass can be repaired good as new. Aluminum cannot. That is also true.One thing that is great about Aluminium Hulls is that they bounce and dent when hitting Rocks that would Shred Fiberglass Hulls
Many years back we hit a submerged object at high speed in our 18' aluminum boat. Caved in or up rhe bottom a couple feet. Boat was badly skewed but we got rack to the ramp. Minor injuries from being bounced around but boat never leaked a drop. Insurance adjuster tokd us that had we had a glass boat, it would have shattered and we all would have went swimming !! Due to high replacement costs from totaled glass boats, the insurance is much higher on glass than an aluminum hull. Even after that insurance claim, my yearly cost of full coverage insurance on another aluminum boat was about one third the cost of a similiar glass boat. That accident was a key decision for me to never own another glass boat. According to the insurance adjuster, the only time glass boats are repaired is for munor scrapes and dings, anything structural at all is cause for a total loss.One thing that is great about Aluminium Hulls is that they bounce and dent when hitting Rocks that would Shred Fiberglass Hulls
Watercraft are typically totaled when damage exceeds 70-75% of its value.According to the insurance adjuster, the only time glass boats are repaired is for munor scrapes and dings, anything structural at all is cause for a total loss.
Properly done repairs(and most aren't) can happen on Glass Boats. Alumimium Boats, are easier to repair. They repair the Aluminium Skins on Airplanes all the timeAnd fiberglass can be repaired good as new. Aluminum cannot. That is also true.