Glen
Jetboaters Commander
- Messages
- 515
- Reaction score
- 710
- Points
- 187
- Location
- Fredericksburg, Virginia
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2016
- Boat Model
- 242X E-Series
- Boat Length
- 24
Glen I will definitely start by saying thank you for your service! I do not have 1000's of hours of experience on blue water only maybe a couple hundred as a captain of various vessels and maybe another 100 as a passenger so your experience does surpass mine in that category by a long shot. I have owned over a dozen sports bikes in the last 18 years so I do understand the concept on this and I would very much argue that 24 ft Yamaha is very much like owning a sports bike when compared to most bow riders in the similar length category. I looked and could not easily find a bow rider that is a non jet that could pass the planing time and the 0-30 time of the Yamaha. I just looked up 5 brands that I knew off the top of my head and most were not even really close. As for fins I can only speak for my personal experience and at this point I have only had one time where I felt fins would be advantage for me and that's when someone who has never driven a jet boat takes the wheel as most mention they have a tough time at fist keeping the boat straight at idle speeds but usually only take me a minute or two of showing them what to do and they are good. I feel my 240 is more maneuverable then my 20ft I/O that I still have as well. Once again I have no experience on fins so I cant say whether they are better or worse just personally have seen no need for them. Even in the circumstance of needing rapid deceleration I understand the characteristics of my boat and know that if this situation were to arise I need to turn the wheel quickly while under power then pull back on the throttle once the vessel has started the turn and will give probably more effect then pulling back on the throttle and then turning with fins. My post was really meant more to just be funny I sure hope no one took offence to it if they did I apologize. Fins are a personal preference if some feel they need them more power to them its there boat and there choice I would never question which radio someone put in there its the same with fins I would just tell someone first getting into this try it with out fins first if it doesn't work for you get them.
2015 Yamaha AR240 320 HP time to plane 2.3 seconds 0-30 4.3 seconds
2016 Formula 240 BR 320 HP time to plane 7.5 seconds 0-30 9.9 seconds
2015 Cobalt r5 375 HP time to plane ? 0-30 7.59 seconds
Bryant Calandra 320 HP time to plane 3.2 seconds 0-30 8.5 seconds
Chaparral Suncoast 300 HP outboard time to plane 3.0 seconds 0-30 8.5 seconds
So on the acceleration, all Yamaha's are like sports bikes. Nobody here doubts that-
The difference is with the new keel's and higher freeboard on the 24's, it is my opinion that Yamaha is moving up-market into the 'Sea Ray' domain of recreational boaters. They are now shopping for customers who value tracking and stability, over adrenaline and sub-moves. (with these boats)
Bet they have a customer acquisition model (I do this sales stuff for a living) that pairs the size of boat, with the age of buyer, and likely requirements and income.
Brands have realized that getting a customer is the hard part, keeping them is the smart part. We will be irrationally loyal, if treated well by the boat and manufacturer. As long as the manufacturer has products to move with our 'maturing' needs (of being less young ;-), we'll stick with what we know.
When I was born, my parents had a Catalina 22; at 70 my dad finally sold his Catalina 49 (their largest boat). He walked up nearly every boat size they made in the 40 years in between, in proportion to the size of our family and income.
Totally agree on the fins. Personally preference.
At the end of the day, we are in violent agreement. Godspeed @robert843