I am a new Parker owner. I bought an 2000 1801 with 2002 Yamaha F115 (500 hours) in early February. I located this boat in the Philly area, had it surveyed, and drove from California to test drive and pick-up the boat. Bit of a hike to drive back to California in winter weather... but arrived without any problems.
I selected Parker for it's excellent layout and fishing space for (mainly) fly-fishing in the local bays and Delta waters, but will take the boat to Baja for three weeks in June. So I needed to make the boat mine by doing some work on her to fit her out for my needs.
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly...
The Good - the boat is sound and the engine is good, compression is in spec and it runs very well. Overall a nice, fishable boat.
The Bad... the factory cooler/pilot seat is useless to me - I needed a quality live bait tank with leaning post that would make optimum use of the cockpit space. If you fish the West Coast or Baja, live bait (for chum) is almost always essential. Second, the electronics were crap- no surprise there. Third, I need rod racks to protect fragile fly rods and a good trolling motor to fish the way I do,.
The Ugly... the black bottom paint is functional but far from smooth. It is really ugly.
Cleaned the boat, got it registered, and ordered some bits and pieces from the Parker dealer - O rings, Parker decals, and a set of replacement rear seat cushions. Then I bought a Humminbird 898C si (side imaging) sonar/sounder/GPS, and Minn Kota Riptide ST 80 + iPilot w/ quick detachable mount, two Deka 12V AGM batteries, a Stealth charging system, an Offshore Marine Products oval 30 gallon bait tank, a Rule 800 GPH bait pump, washdown pump, and a ton of marine cabling, wire, fittings, and oddments.
With this pile of valuable material in hand, or nearly so, I called Stan Pleskunas of Moss Landing. Stan is well known for his skills in fitting out boats for fishing - and understands the needs of flyfishers. The weather finally calmed down enough to get busy on the boat this week.
First we cleaned up the boat and stripped out the cockpit seat, the old electronics, and most of wire to make room in the chases for a new wiring layout. The two AGM batteries for the trolling motor were mounted in the console with the Stealth AC/DC charger (is charges off the Yamaha AND off 120 AC). The charger will charge/maintain the two switched starting batteries and the trolling motor batteries. I will have 4 12V batteries in two banks - plenty for 'juice' for all starting, trolling motor, and accessory needs. We ran the new wiring Tuesday and yesterday, hooked up the new electronics, made a custom double battery tray and cover, and mounted the batteries and charger system. This is pretty straight forward work, but it helps to have two people when running wire through the chases.
The bait tank will arrive early next week via UPS and we have designed a compact and handsome leaning post that will attach to the bait tank - this unit will replace the cooler/swing back seat the the factory provides.
I left my camera over at Stan's shop, but I will have some pictures and a further report early next week.
I selected Parker for it's excellent layout and fishing space for (mainly) fly-fishing in the local bays and Delta waters, but will take the boat to Baja for three weeks in June. So I needed to make the boat mine by doing some work on her to fit her out for my needs.
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly...
The Good - the boat is sound and the engine is good, compression is in spec and it runs very well. Overall a nice, fishable boat.
The Bad... the factory cooler/pilot seat is useless to me - I needed a quality live bait tank with leaning post that would make optimum use of the cockpit space. If you fish the West Coast or Baja, live bait (for chum) is almost always essential. Second, the electronics were crap- no surprise there. Third, I need rod racks to protect fragile fly rods and a good trolling motor to fish the way I do,.
The Ugly... the black bottom paint is functional but far from smooth. It is really ugly.
Cleaned the boat, got it registered, and ordered some bits and pieces from the Parker dealer - O rings, Parker decals, and a set of replacement rear seat cushions. Then I bought a Humminbird 898C si (side imaging) sonar/sounder/GPS, and Minn Kota Riptide ST 80 + iPilot w/ quick detachable mount, two Deka 12V AGM batteries, a Stealth charging system, an Offshore Marine Products oval 30 gallon bait tank, a Rule 800 GPH bait pump, washdown pump, and a ton of marine cabling, wire, fittings, and oddments.
With this pile of valuable material in hand, or nearly so, I called Stan Pleskunas of Moss Landing. Stan is well known for his skills in fitting out boats for fishing - and understands the needs of flyfishers. The weather finally calmed down enough to get busy on the boat this week.
First we cleaned up the boat and stripped out the cockpit seat, the old electronics, and most of wire to make room in the chases for a new wiring layout. The two AGM batteries for the trolling motor were mounted in the console with the Stealth AC/DC charger (is charges off the Yamaha AND off 120 AC). The charger will charge/maintain the two switched starting batteries and the trolling motor batteries. I will have 4 12V batteries in two banks - plenty for 'juice' for all starting, trolling motor, and accessory needs. We ran the new wiring Tuesday and yesterday, hooked up the new electronics, made a custom double battery tray and cover, and mounted the batteries and charger system. This is pretty straight forward work, but it helps to have two people when running wire through the chases.
The bait tank will arrive early next week via UPS and we have designed a compact and handsome leaning post that will attach to the bait tank - this unit will replace the cooler/swing back seat the the factory provides.
I left my camera over at Stan's shop, but I will have some pictures and a further report early next week.