How much work it is to maintain sterndrives and why outboards are better even though they cost more up front! And you've got two of them unless its got straight inboards or V-drives.
And, the fact that most boat companies are too cheap to install closed cooling on inboard engines which were designed to be that way from the start. A foolish 'economy'. Open cooling is less efficient, because its not pressurized, it takes a lot longer to winterize and causes a lot of corrosion. Even in fresh water, cast iron engines, exhaust manifolds and exhaust risers rust.
PS I took a look at one of these on line. I for sure hope that yours has a remote oil filter for each engine because if not that's a cruel joke on the part of FW to make some one have to hang upside down to change a !@#$% oil filter! Getting at the center spark plugs between the engines looks do-able but tough, and if its not closed cooled, lots a luck getting at the drain plugs on either side of the block.
So perhaps a more general statement would be "I wish I knew that most boat companies could not care less how difficult and expensive their product is to service, which they could have avoided if they weren't so dern CHEAP!!"
A closed cooling system plus a remote oil filter would have eliminated most of the maintenance headaches and added about 1500 to the price of each engine. Not much on a boat that was as expensive as that new. But they'd rather put the 1500 into fancy wood paneling and seats etc.
http://www.yachtworld.com/boats/2001/Fo ... OuZrNQrJkghttp://www.yachtworld.com/boats/2001/Fo ... OuZrNQrJkgIf you are not a do it yourselfer then it may all be academic, but this is a very expensive craft to maintain, compounded by design decisions not made in the owner's best interest. So when you get the bill for 2 tune ups, 2 oil changes, 2 engine winterization, 2 outdrive service, just pay it and enjoy the boat. But it ain't gonna be cheap, or reasonable...