Misterfu02 wrote:
Did every piece of annual maintenance on VP's maintenance schedule.
STRONGLY considering outboard power for the next one... Either that or a boat that doesn't have non-removable fiberglass all around the engine box.
That's what I've been saying, for years. The older boats that had either the dog house and jump seats on either side, or the wide bench seat in front of the engine with the large sun pad (like mine) were a lot easier once you got the dog house off or the seat out of the way. What I did when I replaced the deck back in 2007 was replace the full width seat with two 36"wide seats (pontoon furniture) and I cut the bulkhead behind them in half, so I can lift out each seat, then remove the bulkhead one half at a time, its on a take apart hinge. I can also open it like a door, if all I have to do is get at the oil filter on the port side.
I bet you could take the boat to a good fiberglass shop and figure out a way to make that 'glass removable, by reinforcing the remaining structure. I would never ever buy a modern I/O boat designed like that. It shows to me total disrespect to the owner and mechanics. As in, we don't give a damn about you, how much trouble this causes you and all we care about is making it look all pretty and as cheap as possible. Because, there is no reason why, that could not be designed to be removable. Just take a look at custom built race cars, how all the panels can be removed for access. Difference is, they are designed by people who care about maintenance.
For sure get an outboard next time. The only downside is up front cost, after that, every other point is an advantage.
Self draining
no fumes in the bilge
you can't have a flooded bilge from a failed cooling hose (this happened to me once!)
no alignment issues
no bellows leak causing rusted gimble/ujoints
can trim up without damaging ujoints
wide choice of engines
approx. 400 lbs lighter for the same hp
advantage of I/O
cheaper to repower
simple GM Marine engines, if you grew up in the '70s like me you know these engines inside and out
can be run on a simple Holley, Edelbrock or Quadrajet carb (older models)
can be fitted with closed cooling to reduce internal corrosion