ric wrote:
Spending all day on a boat that averages 6-7gph vs 8-9 is not insignificant.
It is insignificant for me. We spend all day on the boat, but most of it is spent anchored in a cove swimming. I only run the boat engine a few hours per trip to the lake. On vacation, we run more, but 1-3 gph is not significant for my use.
ric wrote:
The ability to go fast isn't insignificant.
It is insignificant for me. I have no need to run 50+. I rarely run more than cruising speed. I run <35MPH 95% of the time. If I do run fasrter, it's just for kicks, not for a significant need.
ric wrote:
Comfort, speed, and efficiency is everything. That's what drives the market in cars, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and even electronics. Like I said, just the "V" angle of a hull makes almost no difference in comfort these days. It did 20-30 years ago before we had computers and no decent ways to test things. Today boat hulls are just as refined as airplane wings.
In my case, comfort is a lot higher than speed and efficiency.
IMO, cars and boats (and their respective markets) are completely different, and a terrible comparison. I'm still confused how a lighter and shallower boat has a more comfortable ride than mine. What has been refined?
I'm talking about a '94 boat, not a '60's car...