Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Welcome to Jetboaters.net!
We are delighted you have found your way to the best Jet Boaters Forum on the internet! Please consider Signing Up so that you can enjoy all the features and offers on the forum. We have members with boats from all the major manufacturers including Yamaha, Seadoo, Scarab and Chaparral. We don't email you SPAM, and the site is totally non-commercial. So what's to lose? IT IS FREE!
Membership allows you to ask questions (no matter how mundane), meet up with other jet boaters, see full images (not just thumbnails), browse the member map and qualifies you for members only discounts offered by vendors who run specials for our members only! (It also gets rid of this banner!)
She tells me that Yamaha has definite plans for a 35' jet powered cruiser in the relatively near future. There will need to be a plant expansion first though.
Don't put me down for one...that cruiser they marketed in the far east was several hundred thousand. I will buy a pre-owned 10 year old for $60K thank you very much. But I wish they would enter the market and help bring down the costs, not increase them.
35ft=no trailer or lift=jet drives in saltwater all the time =BAD unless serious improvements are made. This boat would have to be a complete ground up project. I am in for a 26-28' weekendender you could still get on a lift or trailer.
I'm for the 26' to 28' weekender as well.
If they go for the big 35, they are getting into double deck size and type of boats, or going for speed boats. We shall see I guess!
Wife and I have talked several times of getting a bigger boat when we have the kids move out (20 years from now) and take cruises up to Mackinac island and/or out to the east coast and down to the Bahamas. If we do that, then the 35 would be more our style I guess.
I agree that 35' is too ambitious, not really very marketable to the lake crowd. 28' - 30' cuddy would be the sweet spot I think, just thought it was a cool little piece of info to share. Could be that those engineering and design plans change and the size shrinks a little when the corporate decision making / rubber meets the road is complete.
I can't see them jumping from 23' 6" right to 35'. I could see a smaller cruiser or cuddy though. If successful they may move up in size. Ironically, Chaparral is stopping production of 35'+ boats because demand is way down. They are getting into jetbaots and entry level bowriders like their H2O series.
I'd like to see a trailer able 30 footer that the four of us could spend the weekend on. They are going to have to put at least a lower reving v6 attached to redesigned jet pumps to make this cruiser work for this market.
The last time I talked with a Yamaha factory guy, he said the jet pump design absolutely prohibited a boat that would typically stay in the water. In other words, anything with a sleeping berth.
Put this in the believe it when I see it category...