T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
452.1 | RI ain't the only place !!! | FSLENG::AUGER | | Thu Jul 27 1989 15:40 | 25 |
| < The Price of Boatin' Goin Up>
Don't feel like RI is the only place dock prices have increased at
a ridiculous pace!!! I dock my boat in the Merrimack River in Newburyport, MA.
Last season I paid $49.00/ft - the same dock space this season cost me $70/ft.
It isn't just my marina - it was a conspiracy!! Every marina increased their
price/foot in just about the same manner....That's a 43% increase in just one
season without any additional or improved service....
I also think it's peaked at least in my area. With a tighten economy
and people having a few less $$$, the new 150 slip marina that opened just this
season and with plans for another new marina next year - I think the prices
will drop next year. I've had a boat in the Merrimack for 12 years and this
is the first season my marina has had so many open slips. The rule has been
if you didn't get your slip paid in full before April - you didn't get a slip.
....not any more....
Another complaint is the cost of gas - what the going rate for a gallon
of gas at the dock...In Newburyport is up to a $1.42 and that's for 87 octane
regular if you're lucky...What are other's paying for gas???
Regards,
Dave "Harpoonist"
|
452.2 | Masthead lowered some prices | BAGELS::MONDOU | | Fri Jul 28 1989 09:57 | 4 |
| I did note in last Sunday's Providence paper, Masthead Marina
on Greenwich Bay is offering 25' slips at a discounted price.
|
452.3 | Only $1.19 in Hamptom | WEDOIT::JOYCE | | Fri Jul 28 1989 10:12 | 7 |
| Hampton Harbor in NH has a new gas dock. Prices are very good, reg.
unleaded $1.19. Hours are 6:00 am - 6:00 pm. Cash and maybe bank
card. The place is located at the state pier to the right of the
bridge. If someone hasn't been into Hampton Harbor, make sure you
keep to the right after passing under the bridge. Don't pass in
back of the green/red/black can. There is a series of rocks that
just show at low tide.
|
452.4 | Marinas must make their $$$ during the season | HAZEL::YELINEK | WITHIN 10 | Fri Jul 28 1989 10:24 | 17 |
| > Another complaint is the cost of gas - what the going rate for a gallon
> of gas at the dock...In Newburyport is up to a $1.42 and that's for 87 octane
> regular if you're lucky...What are other's paying for gas???
Parker River at bridge 1A (now Jimmy's Marine)........$ 1.509
Ipswich Bay Yacht Club (I've been told.....)..........$ 1.529
Lobster Cove (Annisquam River)........................$ 1.55
Gas dock in Annisquam closest to
the cut bridge (Glouster Harbor)...................$ 1.429
Danversport Yacht Club................................$ 1.369
(I believe I saw this price ~1 month ago)
I paid $ 1.60/Gal in Niantic Conn. back in April !
|
452.5 | | SQPUFF::HASKELL | | Fri Jul 28 1989 14:08 | 7 |
| I'm on a mooring and carry my gas in 6 gallon can. I pay $1.05 here
in Nashua.
But then I have a sail boat and only use about 15 gallons a season
%^).
Paul
|
452.6 | | SQPUFF::HASKELL | | Fri Jul 28 1989 14:11 | 12 |
| Re 5.
I also moor in cape Porpoise Maine for $500 for the season. This
is for my 30 foot boat.
I use to have a slip in Danversport and a mooring at City Boat in
Newburyport.
It is a whole lot less expensive when you gp north and get into
a working harbor.
Paul
|
452.7 | | DNEAST::BELTON_TRAVI | Travis Belton | Fri Jul 28 1989 16:15 | 8 |
| what would you rather see,
$70/ft and $1.50/gal
or
condominiums where your marina used to be
|
452.8 | .... | LEVERS::SWEET | Capt. Codfish...GW Fishing Team | Fri Jul 28 1989 17:11 | 8 |
| $1.34 at danversport yacht club
$1.39 at port marine beverly
$1.37 at marina bay quincy
I pay $55/foot at port marine in danvers, goes up to $90./foot down
in berverly.
Bruce
|
452.9 | Up North. | SCIVAX::DAY | | Mon Jul 31 1989 09:18 | 6 |
| Mooring in South Bristol, Maine (a working harbor?) is $500 for
the season - up from $300 last year!!
Gas in Boothbay Harbor - $1.55.
I've heard it's better up North!
|
452.10 | Why did I assume I could afford this? | SMVDV1::JGUNNERSON | JLG | Mon Jul 31 1989 09:30 | 8 |
| Having my boat on a mooring I can not add to the conversation on
slips (except to say that there must be a reason I have a mooring
rather than a slip - $$$$$), but I can tell you that gas at Ryder's
Cove in Pleasant Bay (Cape Cod) is $1.50/gallon. I haven't found
any other sources of fuel in the area yet - the pumps in Chatham
Harbor are reserved for commercial boats.
john
|
452.11 | pure convenience | HAZEL::YELINEK | WITHIN 10 | Mon Jul 31 1989 10:39 | 6 |
|
My boat is 5.5 miles from my house on the Parker River where
a Town mooring permit costs me $20./year. I own the mushroom.
|
452.12 | FOOLS DON'T LISTEN,WISEMEN DON'T NEED ADVICE | TYCOBB::J_BORZUMATO | | Tue Aug 01 1989 11:15 | 25 |
| There's no reason for slip prices being so high, the fool's who
jack these prices up are going to be left talking to themselves.
Then we'll see who's gonna pay the bills. I believe they
are entitled to a profit, and a reasonable one, but they think
we're all stupid, and will pay any amount for a slip. Mine has
gone up 120% in the last 2 seaons. If i were in their shoes
i'd be intersested in keeping the customers i have, rather than
trying to rape them. Things arn't that great, and their in the luxury
business. On the gas issue, the fuel dock upstream from me, went
up to $1.50, (they were the least expensive around previously)
i asked the guy who runs it, why, "they just arbitrarily sp?
decided to do it. They pay around $.80-.85 per gallon. Now is that
price gouging or what. You can imagine what i told him, and i don't
mix my words. I will not return, and from what he said, a truck
load of others have said the same thing. They'll come down,
their competition is at $1.28 and $1.32 a gal. for the premium
unleaded. Their way out of line on dockspace and fuel, the economy
does not fall in line with what they have in mind, seems we've
been here before with these fools, and they still havn't learned
their lesson. BUT THEY WILL.
JIM.
|
452.13 | Good Job Jim! | ANT::MBREAULT | | Tue Aug 01 1989 12:02 | 5 |
| Bravo!
Couldn't have said it better.
_mb
|
452.14 | GasAholic ? | HAZEL::YELINEK | WITHIN 10 | Tue Aug 01 1989 13:41 | 25 |
| re: .12 I agree...Wonder who'll be around to bail THEM out!
> ....their competition is at $1.28 and $1.32 a gal. for the premium unleaded.
Wow. Premium Unleaded! All the docks I've been at have nothing but
Regular Unleaded (~87 octane). I see more & more people filling
their dinghys with 6 gal. jerry cans with their favorite gas just
to avoid paying $1.50/gal at the dock located within a stones throw
of their mooring. No kidding. I could hit the dock with a stone.
Its true these marinas need to make their mony, when they can, if
they're a seasonal business But to charge such outrageous gas prices!!!
Perhaps the marinas need to make the mony at the pumps to compensate
for the lack of sales on boats they overprice and the lack of people
requesting service because their lack of providing QUALITY service.
But,....I was aware, and was warned prior to purchase of my vessel
that - you got a boat..you're going to pay. I believe any hobby
or activity has its associated costs to operate/maintenence etc.
but I also believe that because of the short season here in the
East, that boaters are.. at times taken advantage of.
When will it all stop. (BTW:vessel = 20' Grady White)
/MArk
|
452.17 | Insurance is a factor | WILKIE::CERIA | 2*(454+4bbl)=$0 | Tue Aug 01 1989 15:43 | 6 |
| I a partial factor why gas prices are so high is, that insurance
for the gas docks are high do to risk of water pollution/contamination
from a leaking tank. I here the EPA is always checking these gas
docks for leaky tanks.
Jeff
|
452.18 | Pointer | ARCHER::SUTER | Gentlemen, start your *marine* engines! | Wed Aug 02 1989 16:12 | 5 |
|
Conversation on a Shared Ownership marina has been moved
to note #461.
Rick
|
452.19 | | USEM::SPENCE | | Fri Aug 04 1989 09:30 | 7 |
| I was at Block Island over Memorial Day weekend. They were charging
$1.76 a gallon. So fill up before you visit. Also I can see a profit
margin...but 100% ! Just how high can their insurance be? I notice
several marinas have their tanks high and dry in a safe location,
not underground and have the lines run to the docks. Not only that
but between slip prices and fuel prices I wouldn't be surprised
to see a few marina's go under if this keeps up.
|
452.20 | cuttyhunk texaco is still $1.28 | SMURF::AMATO | Joe Amato | Fri Aug 04 1989 09:43 | 0 |
452.21 | | SQPUFF::HASKELL | | Fri Aug 04 1989 11:00 | 11 |
| How many of us who have boats (both power and sail) would be willing
to boycott ALL MARINAS for a complete season.
Yes, we would loose the enjoyment of using our boats, but we sure
would be sending a message to the Marina Operators about what we
think of their unfair practice.
I for one would be willing to do all I could to reduce the totally
unacceptable pricing practices.
Paul
|
452.22 | Boycott Marina Service, Too | SLALOM::PEARSON | | Fri Aug 04 1989 11:31 | 9 |
| In addition to boycotting slip rental, how 'bout boycotting having
any service done at Marinas, too! I have had my boat winterized
by the dealer (who also operates a Marina) and recently had a bad
experience due to incompetent service. The owner denied any
responsibility for what happened. Just like outrageous prices for
slip rentals and fuel, $45.00/hr for questionable service is also
worth boycotting.
Jon
|
452.23 | | WONDER::COYLE | Only 48.8% of my former self! | Fri Aug 04 1989 14:59 | 32 |
| The last few replies about boycotts have set me to thinking.
Boycotts do work, especially if there really is over pricing.
I have no idea wether or not ther is. I don't boat, I just read
out of curiosity and possible future interest. The one cost that
marinas, and all businessmen(women) have to consider is the value
of their real estate if it were used for another purpose. Read
waterfront condos in this case.
A aquaintance of mine used to own an unpaved airport. He was always under
pressure to sell the sell the land for other "more finacially
reasonable" purposes. He resisted for years, but eventually he
reached the point where he could not raise his prices enough to
justify keeping the land for that purpose. To keep the land as
an airport would be a lousy business decision, even though it was
what he wanted in his heart. The pressures of others "in this case
wife and family" forced a business decision and the airport is now
a condo.
This is probabaly the same type of pressure marinas have that is
pressuring the price increases. If for any reason the cost of keeping
the marina operating is no longer acceptable to the users, and some
other service is willing to spend the cash. Goodby marina, hello
condo or whatever.
So if you boycott, recognize the risk. If they are price gouging
you might win; but if they are just keeping the price competitve
with other uses, you might lose everything.
It's the way the free market works.
-Joe
|
452.24 | More visits from ghosts of Christmas past/present/future needed | SMVDV1::JGUNNERSON | JLG | Fri Aug 04 1989 17:04 | 29 |
| Excuse me. No one *forces* anyone to make the best economic use of any
resource. Land included. Taxes may affect the decision, but that is
about it. Most people are in a particular business because when they
started it/joined it they thought that it would be a way to make a
living that they would enjoy, i.e., not a purely economic decision.
Your friend had a price on his heart. That's all. He sold out to the
developers (with pressure from the family that wanted whatever they
wanted and sale got it for them). If someone really wants something, it
doesn't matter what the offer to take it away from them is.
If a business is making money while meeting expenses, and the owners
enjoy the business the fact that someone comes along and offers them $1
million for the land doesn't make a damn bit of difference in the cost
structure of the business, prices don't have to be raised to reflect
that offer. Why was your friend raising prices?
This is exactly the kind of thinking that has made this country a less
enjoyable place. People who are only involved in a venture to make
money on the assumption that the only return on investment that is
important is money and that it must me maximized to matter the cost to
the community and environment. Yuppies and the me generation, save us!
john
P.S. A boycott won't work for another reason. There aren't enough
of "us". There are plenty of people who will make use the of the
marinas. Also, as the previous noter said, a boycott may force them
to sell out to those with "more financially reasonable purposes".
|
452.25 | Condo made a stone'a | PACKER::GIBSON | I'm the NRA | Mon Aug 07 1989 12:37 | 20 |
| The whole Idea of Boycotting is absurd. If your thinking allong
those lines, it must mean that you don't enjoy boating enough to
even bother with it. Get out sell your boat and let someone who
really likes it take your place. That Will help to lower prices
at marinas, as it is the basic law of supply & demand. You will
be helping to lower the demand and prices will come down.
Just think! You will also save those monthly mortgage payments on
the boat and the insurance & Fuel costs & winterizing & maintaince
cost, ect.ect.ect....
Land values are one of the major reasons for the high price of marina
costs (supply & demand again) Everyone wants to be by the water,
wether it be a boat, cottage or condo and with that much compition
for a limited comodity; whoever offers the most for it will win.
Just my 2 cents worth!
Walt
|
452.26 | Lake Winnisquam, Laconia, etc..., NH. | SALEM::TAYLOR_M | Watch your A$$ in NH--$peed Trap$! | Mon Aug 07 1989 14:44 | 26 |
| This really might not fit here, but I don't want to write a new
note just for it.
For Lake Winnisquam weekend launchers that are accustomed to using
the ramp at Martel's Bait Shop on Bay Street: The ramp is permanently
shut down. I heard that it was due to on-going problems with parking
of rigs that have put in their boats there. Lots of trucks and cars
and their trailers could be seen across the street from Martel's
on weekends. This evidently caused great problems with the owner
of the parking area.
The bottom line is: your launching area is narrowed-down to either
Sarge's store or Jay's marina in Winnisquam. I guess I'm just trying
to save folks the inconvenience of fighting traffic all the way
into Laconia and then turning around and driving 3 miles back through
the way they came from.
And---good luck trying to slide into someplace else---they're all
maxed-out as well.
Remember, Jay's Marina is $7 in-$7 out, with no parking available.
Good luck. You're probably better off going someplace else at this
point. :-(
Mike
|
452.27 | An article to share, but first...... | ATSE::URBAN | | Mon Aug 07 1989 17:58 | 202 |
|
Prices at marina's ( as well as prices for most things) are
a function of supply, demand, and greed. As long as there are
those who place so little value on VALUE that they will pay
whatever to have "it", those who understand "value" will be priced
out of the market, pained by participation, or just plain refuse to
participate in it.
A good case in point is the new 2 seat sports car that has come
out from whatever Japenese car company. Dealers are marking it
up as much as $3,000 over the manufacturers list price and are not
having any trouble selling them.
What kind of idiot would willing pay more than full list price for a car?
I guess there are an abundance of them. If Sears tried to charge him
$100 more than list for a toaster would he pay that too?
Its this same mentality applied to boat slips that drives the prices.
Pleasure boating is booming and there are not enough slips to go
around. So, if you are not willing to pay because it is not a good value,
step aside; the guy behind you doesnt care 'cause its only money. And
the marina operator will be more than happy to take the money 'cause
that's his job.
As I sit here typing I realize that I am about to get seriously on a
soapbox, so I'll put on the brakes here. What follows is what I think
is a great article, amusing in a bittersweet way; for me it touches
cleanly on some of what is going wrong with society today.
I spent a few summers at a boatyard (with a woodpile) in Normandy
Beach, N.J., so I really can relate to this. Hope You enjoy it.
Reprinted without permission from Power and Motoryacht, August, 1989
The Wimpification of Our Boatyards
by Tom Fexas
(His italics are my Caps)
As we speak, a national treasure is being destroyed before our
eyes. A great part of this country's maritime heritage - old,
dirty boatyards - are being cast aside for that which is trendy.
Take, for example, The Ramp in San Francsico - this was one of
California's grittiest, saltiest boatyards, catering to working
vessels of gnarly local fishermen and knowledgeable pleasure
boatmen. I've been there. This was a REAL boatyard, a WATERMAN'S
boatyard.
What happened is almost too horrible to relate here and is graph-
ically depicted in the photo above (sorry, no picture here, but..
[ Approx. 60 - 80 people sitting around little tables in the
open air. Boats can be made out in the background but the
view is broken up by trees. Most people facing the boats.
Everybody looks well dressed in a casual way, sports jackets,
sweaters.]
A perfectly good boatyard has been turned into a..a.. DAMMED
YUPPIE BOATYARD/CAFE! Imagine, a BOATYARD/CAFE!
Yes friends, the Ramp(a strong simple name that came from the
steep concrete launch ramp at the yard) has been bought out. Its
now The San Francisco Boatyard. The day of the Yuppie boatyard
has arrived and yuppies will be descending on boatyards the way
a hoard of cockroaches would attack a scrap of moldy food under
the sink.
Real Boatyards Don't Serve Perrier
We all know that Califonians are trendsetters and what happens there
spreads to the rest of the country and, thereafter, the world. Yes,
the Yuppie cockroaches are coming to a boatyard near you(if they're
not already there). This is a truly nefarious development for
boatmen who have known and loved boatyards all thier lives, and
flags the end of boatyards as we know them and the beginning of
the "yupyard".
To quote an article in the Western Boatman(Feb.,1989) about the
transformation of The Ramp: "Every Sunday, for example, hordes of
young San Franciscans swarm into the cafe's outdoor patio for
eggs benedict and clarient marmalade. Boat owners in the ajacent
yard are adjunct listeners to the jazz concerts that are staged
amid the clattering plates and chattering customers."
EGGS BENEDICT? CLARIENT MARMALADE? JAZZ CONCERTS? CLATTERING
PLATES? CHATTERING CUSTOMERS? IN A BOATYARD???
Old boatyards! I love them with a passion. They have a friendly
feeling to them thats difficult to describe. There's something
about bottom-paint spattered dirt(real boatyards are never paved),
the old sheds, and the rickety docks that make one FEEL GOOD.
There are a few left in every boating town, but they're disappearing
fast. Connecticut has a good number left, as does Long Island,
New York. The Lakes region has some good ones but there are very
few left in Florida. South Jersey probably has some of the best
old yards in the country. But these great yards are fast being
replaced by wimpy places called "Boating Centers", with Butler
buildings and dry stack storage and, yes, cafes.
Yup, Yup and Away
Yuppies. God, I hate them and all they stand for. "Yuppie"
initially referred to a young urban professional - in other words,
young people with bucks. It was originally a COMPLIMENTARY term.
Six or seven years agao one could be proud to be a Yuppie. Now,
Yuppie-ism has turned into a fanatic cult, a cult with its own
uniforms, language, and rituals. Worse are yuppie imposters who
can't really qualify as yups, but do thier best to act like them.
The original yuppies shun all the foolishness and are doing their
own thing now.
Today, "Yuppie" is an extremely derogatory term, one which I would
think twice about applying to my worse enemy. Yuppies are phony,
pompous, backstabbers to whom "getting ahead" is paramount. They
accumulate things just to have THINGS - not because they like them.
Yuppies drive - no WEAR - BMW's and Mercedes, not because they
appreciate their features, but because they are a part of the dress
code. A car is like a pair of loafers or a jacket - simply an
accessory with a three pointed star or kidney grilles for the express
purpose of impressing other yups. They don't care about, nor are
they aware of the cars great heritage or its handling and brakes.
Whats important is IMAGE.
Look at the picture! It really says it all. One glance tells you
exactly what kind of people these are: Investment bankers, Stock
analysts, doctors, and yes, worst of all, LAWYERS. It's all there:
The Top-Siders and fake bomber jackets and imported sweaters and
85 dollar haircuts and gold rolexes and 300 dollar sunglasses(with
unnecessary straps around their necks). No doubt "Calvin Klein"
is written all over their damm underpants.
You know, when I was in the Merchant Marines, I, too, wore under-
wear with a name on it. It was MY name stenciled on the waistband.
In those days, nobody would even dream of wearing underwear with
ANOTHER GUY'S name on it - especially a guy like Calvin Klein!
A Yuppie Spectator Sport
To me, boatyards were always a kind of refuge from the world, a
not quite respectable place where one could go and become part
of an underground fraternity that people on the outside didn't
understand. They were places you would'nt take your mother.
They were places where guys could get together, scratch, belch,
say rotten things, laugh, and drink beer while they worked.
A boatyard was a place where you could take a pee in the woodpile.
No more. How could you, with hundreds of sunglassed yuppo eyes
staring at your every move. Besides, these yupyards have spotless
his and hers bathrooms now.
What these yuppies and yuppie imposters do, see, is decend on the
cafe/boatyards on the weekends, stuff eggs benedict and quiche
(we all now what kind of people eat quiche) into their manicured
faces and WATCH guys working on boats.
Look at the picture - nearly everybody is facing the boatyard like
its a damm STAGESHOW.
I can just hear one of these phonies in his affected singsong
voice say to his wife, "Oh, look dear. There's a man actually
PAINTING A BOTTOM! I've often wondered how bottoms got painted."
BOATYARDS HAVE BECOME A YUPPIE SPECTATOR SPORT. What' this
world coming to? Maybe its a commie plot.
Coming Up:
Engine Rebuild?Health Spas
Boatyards soda machines which once dispensed bad stuff like
high octane sodas - tough drinks that rotted your teeth on
contact - will now dispense Perrier and Evian. Boatyard marine
stores are changing too. Now they sell stuff like bronze wool
and drain plugs in DESIGNER PACKAGES.
Anything liquid you buy, like turpentine and thinner, now has
a foolish saftey cap on it. And, guys working in the yard wear
saftey glasses. HALF the written stuff on anything you buy is a
warning label.
All of this comes courtesy of the same damm yuppie lawyers you see
sitting in the picture. Yuppies browse thru marine stores like
they do Bloomingdales, buying stuff like designer-packaged bilge
cleaner(real boatmen know that you simply dump some dishwashing
liquid into the bilge to do the job).
A boatyard/cafe...it boggles the mind. What the hell's coming next?
An engine rebuild shop/health spa? A boat supply store/sorbet
counter? A carpentry shop/Mrs. Field's Cookie Store? The end of an
era is here folks. My advice is to pee in the woodpile while you
can.
|
452.28 | | WODBOT::GINGER | Ron Ginger | Wed Aug 09 1989 09:21 | 7 |
| I loved that article! Ive felt that way for a while about boatyards.
I dont mean to turn this into a soapbox, or an economic discussion, but just
maybe the prices of slips and boats will come down, and boatyards will return
when this damn 'Credit Economy' bubble bursts, and all the yuppies are
foreclosed. I cant help but believe that $100 per ft prices for slips can only
be paid by people with no value for money.
|
452.29 | It already is | ANT::MBREAULT | | Wed Aug 09 1989 13:37 | 3 |
| This is already a soapbox and an economic discussion.
great article...thankx for putting it in, (as it were)___mb
|
452.30 | An update. | FOR200::JOHNS | | Wed Mar 06 1996 15:42 | 11 |
| Wellll.... just to start an update since this string is a bit old.
I just priced slips in the Annapolis Md. area. I did not even ask in
the downtown marina since I knew that would be $$$$$.
Nearby areas varied in price for 1 year for a 34'
Wet Slip - $1200 to $2800
Lift Slip - $2300 to $3400
Rack storage (covered or uncovered boatel) - $1400 to $2000
Garrison.
|
452.31 | | VMSSPT::PAGLIARULO | | Wed Mar 06 1996 16:35 | 4 |
| ok, I'm guessing a wet slip is a slip in the water, a rack slip is one on the
boat rack but what is a lift slip?
George
|
452.32 | The best of both worlds. | FOR200::JOHNS | | Wed Mar 06 1996 17:08 | 11 |
| Sort of a hybrid. It is a dedicated slip, like a wet-slip, so you can
party at the pier when you get in, don't have to wait for the marina to
put your boat in like a for a rack.
The difference is, it has a lift built into the slip. I have a 34'
Scarab III, with a clean gelcoat bottom. No anti-fouling paint.
(Most of the Fountain/Scarab/Cigarette style boats are unpainted for
performance) So, you pull in to your slip, center the boat over the
lift cradle and wind her up out of the water! Voila! No paint, no
barnacles no moss!
Garrison.
|
452.33 | Wow! | CRONIC::SULLIVAN | | Thu Mar 07 1996 10:41 | 9 |
|
A 34' Scarab III...
Bet you know where all the gas stations are... Let's see... leave onset,
stop at woods hole (gas) rock n roll up to cuttyhunk (gas) zip over to
the Vinyard (gas) back to woods hole (gas) and into onset (on fumes) That
would be a cool day!
-Sully
|
452.34 | Exageration? | FOR200::JOHNS | | Thu Mar 07 1996 14:49 | 15 |
| re: -1
:)
Not that bad!
3300rpm = ~40mph = ~34-35gph
With a 200 gal tank, I've got reasonable range.
The upside is that the whole Cheasapeake Bay is now just a day trip!
I can get to my home town in half the time by boat than by car during
friday beach traffic.
It does get bad if you wind her up:
5200rpm = 57mph = SLURP!!!!! (I swear you can watch the needle move!)
Garrison.
|