• 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!)

    free hit counter
  • ISLAND JAY has your Jetboaters.net Clothing, hats, stickers and more all at a 30% discount until June. Click Here for more information>SWAG for JetBoaters.net members only

    Help out a new business and show off your love of Jetboating!

    You can dismiss this notice by clicking the "X" in the upper right>>>>

Yamaha Boats - general questions on what one?

Dmdunn110

Member
Messages
2
Reaction score
1
Points
10
Boat Make
Yamaha
Year
2017
Boat Model
X
Boat Length
21
Hello everyone! I am very new here and hope this is in the right spot.

I am new to the Jetboat community and didn`t really give them a second thought until recently. I have owned a couple boats in my life and am very comfortable around boating but curious on these types of boats in general but most specifically the Yamaha surf boats.

I am trying to decide if certain features are actually worth it for my family and myself. My wife and I are torn between a surf setup type boat or just getting a normal non surf setup. I am a decent/good wake surfer and my wife and friends are not good. They are very new to this world and don`t really ski or anything often, but can get up. However I have a young son (almost 4) and a daughter that will be born in the next 3-5 weeks. So I want a boat that will grow with us until we decide if we want to get a dedicated surf boat for 100k+.

We will be typically going just us 4, but will likely run 6-8 people maybe half the time so we are looking at the 19, but likely going to get the 21/22` boat. Is the motor THAT big of a difference between the surf series and normal series? Ill be driving most the time and I'm not a speed guy by any means. Likely cruising around 28-32? Even less when my daughter is here but is the smaller motors enough to yank larger guys (myself and best friend are both 240(me) 275 (Friend). I have watched numerous videos on the surf wake even with the surf set ups. They aren't good, but enough to have fun it seems and high level guys can let go of the rope.
I want something that I can teach my kids, help friends, etc. but something that also will be enough for me to get back there and just have fun as well.

My though on the jet boat is for Lake Havasu, its not very weedy or grassy. Its rock/sand so we will be doing a lot of pulling up on sandbars, restaurants and floating in the water. So I am looking for a "do it all" minimal maintenance, let my kids learn to drive, etc. It will be our first family boat for the lake so I think something without a prop would be ideal so I can worry a lot less of ruining the lower unit and most importantly my kids (and friends) safety.

Please let me know what you guys think, considering I have next to zero personal experience with these types of boats.
Thank you!
 
Man, idk, if you are eventually going to spend the money on a wake boat I would just pull the trigger on one of those and have the kids grow up with it! But I see your dilemma because it'll be a few years before the kids are ready to shred some waves.

Yamahas are great boats, jack of all trades, but master of none. Yamaha wake series can make a wave but nothing like you're used to on a dedicated wake boat, and you may even need more weight than the standard ballast. Fit and finish won't be as high class, but then again the price is sometimes 1/3 of a wake boat. Learning to drive a Yamaha is different as well. I always tell people you have to remember you're always in motion unless the motors are off and you need thrust to steer. After you get the hang of it the jet boats are so maneuverable. They are a great family boat, our girls (3 and 7 y/o) love it, and we love not having to worry about watching for a prop. A wake boat prop is tucked under so they would have a legit argument you don't need to worry either, but the draft is much more compared to the Yamaha.

We have talked before that if the girls want to wake surf when they are older we would likely go with a yamaha wake series just because we still want a decent ride in chop since we frequent Lake of the Ozarks and I never see any wake boats cruising the main channel. The yamahas are definitely easy to maintain and work on, which saves me money, which is also why we'd stay with the brand. Another thing to note, if you get the supercharged engines they take 91 octane, the naturally aspirated engines can run 87 octane.
 
Man, idk, if you are eventually going to spend the money on a wake boat I would just pull the trigger on one of those and have the kids grow up with it! But I see your dilemma because it'll be a few years before the kids are ready to shred some waves.

Yamahas are great boats, jack of all trades, but master of none. Yamaha wake series can make a wave but nothing like you're used to on a dedicated wake boat, and you may even need more weight than the standard ballast. Fit and finish won't be as high class, but then again the price is sometimes 1/3 of a wake boat. Learning to drive a Yamaha is different as well. I always tell people you have to remember you're always in motion unless the motors are off and you need thrust to steer. After you get the hang of it the jet boats are so maneuverable. They are a great family boat, our girls (3 and 7 y/o) love it, and we love not having to worry about watching for a prop. A wake boat prop is tucked under so they would have a legit argument you don't need to worry either, but the draft is much more compared to the Yamaha.

We have talked before that if the girls want to wake surf when they are older we would likely go with a yamaha wake series just because we still want a decent ride in chop since we frequent Lake of the Ozarks and I never see any wake boats cruising the main channel. The yamahas are definitely easy to maintain and work on, which saves me money, which is also why we'd stay with the brand. Another thing to note, if you get the supercharged engines they take 91 octane, the naturally aspirated engines can run 87 octane.

I just know I wont be the one surfing much, my wife doesn't know how to drive a boat so it`ll be me driving 90% of the time until I teach her more. I have ridden plenty of jetskis so I get the concept of a jet boat, i`ve just never physically been in one or driven in one so its hard to know if ill like it or not. I re read what I said and realistically its going to likely be me driving and teaching my wife how to drive, pulling up on sandbars a lot and more or less just posting up on a spot for most the day and maybe going out and just messing around the boat from time to time once my wife learns. I`ve "surfed" behind a basic jetski and it may not be a big wave but it still is somewhat fun.

I just cant phathom in my life right now to spend 50k (on an old) or 100k+ on a newer wakeboard boat. The boat will be at a 2nd house and will be used maybe 30 times a year?.. you break that down and each time you potentially surf is what... a lot?
 
I have 24 years of experience making jet boats steer with or without thrust so do your research on that , as for what boat to get you will get a lot of opinions but do your research there as well and remember it's the internet best thing to do is take your time deciding and then go for it when you are convinced you have the correct choice in mind.
 
Back
Top