mattkab
Senior Member
And when you have created a large customer base of relatively inexperienced boaters, many of whom are not that interested in learning navigation, the rules of the road, seamanship, and so on but simply want to "go boating," you get a lot of people out driving your boats who aren't very good at it and who can and do make a lot of mistakes or do stupid things.
This.
As someone who owned a Bayliner, and previously 2 Catalina sailboats (another entry-level builder with the same market approach), but who has spent a lot of time on other boats, I am comfortable saying that the build and materials quality is on par with most other production boats in their class.
The problem is that the owners of the boats are, as a generalized whole, inexperienced in boat ownership, and many may not perform the necessary maintenance, may make unwise aftermarket modifications, and/or take the boat out in conditions that stretch the operators experience and comfort. Then things break, go wrong, etc -- and that's supposed to be a flaw in the design or build?
I'm sorry but I firmly believe that if you take a Flemming 55 and treat it the same way, it will appear to have substantial issues as well. The difference, IMO, is that the F55 owner will have, at a minimum, the means to maintain the vessel. Even this is often not true with a Bayliner owner.
All these praises of Bayliners' "great use of space" but where is the photographic evidence? Is it that because they have greater volume than other boats for their length, or what?
It's not that they have greater volume, obviously, but that hey literally cram everything they can into every inch of space. This can be a problem as much as an asset, but that's what they do.
One example off the top of my head is storage in the head. In my Bayliner we had more than enough storage for bathroom supplies, first aid, and even head treatment. In our trawler, we have a fraction of the room (first aid kit is now under the helm instead, and head treatment is in the ample storage space under the floorboards for example). But my wife still wants to expand the storage in the head on our trawler, and we only need a few more inches in the cabinet (It's currently 4" deep -- she wanted 6", maybe 7") to hold what we really want to put there.
I looked at the back side of the cabinet, and found that it is open to the space below the settee in the salon -- basically empty space in the "engine room". Easy. Next offseason build an extension and cut out the back of the cabinet, and provide 8 or 10" of total space with no impact on any other area. While the Bayliner had zero room for extension (the back of the cabinet was the bulkhead at the helm), they used the space more appropriately at the factory, and prevented us from feeling the need to expand their built in storage.
In my opinoin, Bayliner also makes superior use of the vertical space in a boat than many other builders. In our 28' boat, the area under the setee seat on the port side was the headliner for the berth below. Below that was about a foot (height) of storage, and below that the bilge. Below the settee on my trawler is storage. About 4 feet of it.
My 28' Bayliner cabin cruiser could also be made up to provide sleeping arrangements for 7 full-sized adults not including the flybridge. My 35' Europa trawler, in comparison, can sleep at maximum 5 at a time. Now, make no mistake, I prefer the trawler, but a family with four kids might disagree.
All in my opinon, and worth what you paid for it.