I never felt my 115 smoker lacked anything other than when I'm heavily loaded. Even when I was transporting 20 pieces of 6"x6"x10' treated lumber across the bay I had plenty of throttle to punch through. Totally different ride with all that ballast.2013 1801 Yamaha F115 with T-top
The Yamaha 115 engine is the limiting factor the boat. It just doesn’t have the power needed to motor out or motor up on the back of a swell. WOT throttle barley keeps it in the back side of a wave and I’m propped perfectly. I suppose in that situation a 4 blade would be ideal, Awesome little boat though.
MPellet, I would benefit from your expertise and note that you are in my neck of the woods. Any chance you could join me in an outing? I am at Billington Cove.I’ll take 4’ with an 8 second or more interval over tightly packed 1-2s all day long. I’m 18 seasons in with the same 2520SL, great boat but it’s not perfect and if I am being honest, delivers an uncomfortable ride in tight chop that’s within approximately 45 degrees of the bow unless you slow WAY down.
The boat is predictable and seaworthy. I’ve run my boat in all kinds of conditions over a 7 month season in the Northeast and rarely felt unsafe despite occasionally getting into some unexpected weather offshore but when it comes to tight chop on the bow, even when the chop is not very big, you really gotta slow down unless you’re looking to shake out the fillings in your teeth or put the chiropractor on the pay roll…..
2004 2520MVHey All,
I was curious what’s the worst conditions you’ve taken your boats out and how sketchy it was or wasn’t.
Thanks!
- Boat size (ft)
- Swell (ft)
- Period (s)
- Wind (mph/knots) and direction relative to swells.
Hey All,
I was curious what’s the worst conditions you’ve taken your boats out and how sketchy it was or wasn’t.
Thanks!
- Boat size (ft)
- Swell (ft)
- Period (s)
- Wind (mph/knots) and direction relative to swells.
Block,MPellet, I would benefit from your expertise and note that you are in my neck of the woods. Any chance you could join me in an outing? I am at Billington Cove.
Trim tabs and engine trim, need to get dialed in. Coming up the pond, where you can open up, got up on anothers clean wake and started porpoising like crazy! Whoa. The Glacier Bay never did that, completely new to me! Trim was all wrong. Also don’t like the backwash coming up engines when slowing down too quickly. Hear you on chop and slow, we get plenty of afternoon chop.
Crazy story!Learned a valuable lesson about cargo ships the other day...was trolling and ended up about a mile from a big Maersk freighter that was hauling butt closer to shore than I've ever seen and snuck up on us; guessing she was doing 15-20kts in a 500' ship. She was also only about 20mi offshore in ~250fsw. Anyways, I kept an eye on the wake to keep a safe distance...or so I thought. Since we had 5 lines out, I figured I'd just turn into it since it was a bit bigger than I expected. And as it got closer, our reactions quickly went from "uh oh," to "oh s**t." The wake was a double wave about 1 boat length apart and about 8' high; we went up the front side and then stuffed the bow with the windows open on the backside. It was like getting hit in the face with a 5 gallon bucket of seawater. One of only 2 times I've ever stuffed the bow, and I'll never get that close to another cargo ship again. If we took it broadside or had a smaller boat, we would have been in real trouble. So single 8' waves are ok, just shut the windows .
Yeah man, it was. I was in utter shock for about 10min after. I've been a hardcore boater/offshore fisherman here in Florida for almost 20 years and I've never had anything like that happen. And then last weekend, right after that, I rode an anchor like Superman over the reef in the Keys after I freed it from the rocks so we could outrun a nasty storm that popped up out of nowhere (ok, maybe the yellowtail snapper bite distracted us...). I need a break from these Final Destination moments!! I'm the super conservative safety-conscious one in my group, but sometimes sh*t happens. We got the anchor in, I didn't get an AGE, no one got electrocuted. We rode the storm out dry in the cabin and 30min later we were tied up at a dock eating cuban sandwiches and drinking rum runners at a tiki bar. Ran my Parker 2320 back at midnight to the right Key, enjoying the warm tropical breeze and a million stars...love that boat!! Saw two 2520s and a 2320 down there, must be some fellow adventurers.Crazy story!
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