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I think the prevailing opinion is that that engines/power required to run something of that size would be highly inefficient compared to a similarly powered prop boat. If they could figure it out, I would be all over it.
There have been ongoing rumors of a 26' cuddy or something similar for a long time now, but with each year we have only seen the introduction of boats 24.5' and smaller. Per my point above, Yamaha seems very reluctant to come out with anything bigger.
I think the prevailing opinion is that that engines/power required to run something of that size would be highly inefficient compared to a similarly powered prop boat. If they could figure it out, I would be all over it.
There have been ongoing rumors of a 26' cuddy or something similar for a long time now, but with each year we have only seen the introduction of boats 24.5' and smaller. Per my point above, Yamaha seems very reluctant to come out with anything bigger.
I saw the 25 scarab. It looks pretty cool. Yamaha can always use a 3 engine configuration (the existing engines on the 24 footers) to power a 30 footer.
Yamaha built their boat business on quality boats at an attractive price. The lower propulsion cost allowed for Yamaha's prices to be very competitive. A few years ago when a 242 was $50K I dreamed of a 28' version for $75K. Now that a 242 is over $70K I do not see a $100K 28 footer being a successful offering.
Be cool to look at. I am certainly not part of the market if there is one. Off the top of my head isn't long term wet slipping in the water for jetboats not a good idea especially in salt water? And I would guess trailering a 30 foot boat is not really an attractive option either.
Yamaha built their boat business on quality boats at an attractive price. The lower propulsion cost allowed for Yamaha's prices to be very competitive. A few years ago when a 242 was $50K I dreamed of a 28' version for $75K. Now that a 242 is over $70K I do not see a $100K 28 footer being a successful offering.
I would think a 30 footer wouldn't be practical for watersports and rivers and small lakes. It would draft more and less manuverable. So the market is much smaller for that size.
Then there is the towability... not practical at all and it should be on a boat lift not in a salt water slip imho.
I think the prevailing opinion is that that engines/power required to run something of that size would be highly inefficient compared to a similarly powered prop boat. If they could figure it out, I would be all over it.
There have been ongoing rumors of a 26' cuddy or something similar for a long time now, but with each year we have only seen the introduction of boats 24.5' and smaller. Per my point above, Yamaha seems very reluctant to come out with anything bigger.
I'm not trying to be a smartass, but I think fuel efficiency pretty much goes out the window on almost all boats over 26' except boats powered by diesel engines.
We looked at a 28' Bayliner several years ago, it had a 100 gallon gas tank and only one engine.
I'm not trying to be a smartass, but I think fuel efficiency pretty much goes out the window on almost all boats over 26' except boats powered by diesel engines.
We looked at a 28' Bayliner several years ago, it had a 100 gallon gas tank and only one engine.
The current 242x with 1.8L HO engines burns 23.5 gph at WOT @ 50.3mph (which means you could hypothetically burn through the 50 gallon tank in less than 2 hours!). I'm not sure that a 26' or 27'er would burn 80 gallons/hr at WOT. Even if it did, I think a 100 gallon tank would still be pretty good for the average user wanting to get up on plane and cruise for the day.
The current 242x with 1.8L HO engines burns 23.5 gph at WOT @ 50.3mph (which means you could hypothetically burn through the 50 gallon tank in less than 2 hours!). I'm not sure that a 26' or 27'er would burn 80 gallons/hr at WOT. Even if it did, I think a 100 gallon tank would still be pretty good for the average user wanting to get up on plane and cruise for the day.
Yes, you are correct! I had the numbers wrong (by a factor of two), should have said ~40 gal per hour for a twin SHO/SVHO vs ~20 for a twin HO -- the only comparison of the HO vs SHO in a boat would be 190 vs 192.
Here are the numbers for a 190 (basically, 12 gph, 43mph at WOT):
And 192 (double that - 21 gph, 49mph at WOT):
I don't think it would be a market for one. Most 30' plus boats are blue water cruising for fishing or destination trips and cabin cruisers. They would have to give up draft and do a deep v hull and have trim also besides tabs. You would lose most benifits of our smaller jet boats. I just don't see a real market for it for people already spending 250k on a proven boat. Unless you go into a larger cat style boat with jet drive.