Think I need to change plans

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Thinking of changing plans to a cockpit motoryacht?

Lots of ways that could probably work well enough. You can often run it more like a trawler, sea states permitting and with some attention to engine operations. And short, faster hops might not break your (fuel) bank anyway. We sometimes go half a season or more before needing to refuel...


If looking for a specific boat, there's a though to write to everyone that owns that particular boat. Although there's some work involved, you can get owners names from the state it's registered in and just mail letters. I've done that a few times with excellent success. It's surprising to find there are a ton of owners "getting ready" to sell, but haven't listed their boat yet, and often there's a good deal waiting. You become a quick and easy solution to their problem

There are owner's clubs too; it's usually easy enough to join to ask about specific models and so forth. Availability, known faults if any, etc.


You really just have to sort of commit to a fast-boat lifestyle. These big turbo motors gunk up with soot (coking) unless you are at "cruising speed" (80% of WOT) most of the time.

Lots of threads here and on boatdiesel suggesting that's not true as a blanket statement. And it may be more applicable to some diesels versus others. Proper load, proper engine temps, etc. required... but that doesn't always seem to equate to 80% WOT.

FWIW, our diesels will get to the correct operating range at 1100 RPM and above, and once there, will remain there (as near as I can tell) at all RPM. We're not really heavy-duty anglers, but in April/May we do spend lots of hours trolling on one engine at idle... afrer bringing load/temps up, and with a follow-on quick run on plane as we return to the marina. Also, I think our average on this current trip, approx 585 NM so far, has been about 8 knots, and even that was mostly affected by a 100 NM leg at planing speed. Note: we do not have a trawler. :)

-Chris
 
Thanks for most of the replies. Some of the replies however seem to misunderstand my thoughts in the original post. I will try to further explain by paraphrasing some of the replies and expand on my thoughts.

Why do you need a trawler if just using on the Great Lakes

For anyone thats cruised these water will understand this. These waters experience fast moving weather systems fairly often. The large waves created are short period and will kick your a*s and it can be long distances from any shelter. Thought a trawler type at hull speed with high bow and more weight than a mass produced cruiser would be ideal.

Gas or diesel, what difference does it make with only 300 hours in 11 years

You may have missed the part about me retiring in a year. Also I never said I've had the boat since new. But you're partly correct, I don't use the current boat very much anymore. I only have weekends and the marina is 3 hours from home. With our limited time, going to the same places all the time has gotten boring. So instead for cruising to go get a $500 hamburger we are doing short day rides and spending time at the marina with friends. We are ready to cruise again and looking for a boat with range.

Why do you need a boat so large

Don't really know yet what we could get by with. The next boat will be a live aboard, full time for 6 months, no land based home. Our current boat does not have a liveable layout. Works great for weekends and vacations, but not enough storage or cruising range for full time use.

Someone also mentioned bigger cost more for slip and storage. I understand that as we've had a marina slipped / stored boat for many years.

Deals to be found out there, ie. Searay, Carver, others

That is entirely the point of my original post, there are reasonable prices for motor yachts out there and it has me thinking that my be the route to consider. I'm not finding what I would call comparable in the trawler market unless they are 30 or more years old.

Really do appreciate all the replies. A lot to think about.
 
On more thing if I may. If we go the motor yacht route with the bigger horsepower engines designed for planning the boat, is that going to cause issues with hour after hour of slow speeds?
 
Don't misunderstand your post, just hadn't heard your reasoning until now.

For anyone thats cruised these water will understand this. These waters experience fast moving weather systems fairly often. The large waves created are short period and will kick your a*s and it can be long distances from any shelter. Thought a trawler type at hull speed with high bow and more weight than a mass produced cruiser would be ideal.​

Familiar with the Great Lakes and enjoyed them in a non-trawler, although larger than you're considering. Trawler wouldn't be my choice, but understand your reasoning.

Gas or diesel, what difference does it make with only 300 hours in 11 years​

You may have missed the part about me retiring in a year. Also I never said I've had the boat since new. But you're partly correct, I don't use the current boat very much anymore. I only have weekends and the marina is 3 hours from home. With our limited time, going to the same places all the time has gotten boring. So instead for cruising to go get a $500 hamburger we are doing short day rides and spending time at the marina with friends. We are ready to cruise again and looking for a boat with range.​

Perhaps missed the part about where you'll be. If you're still going to be in the area you currently live then still only half the year and still use may be limited. Takes a long time to recover cost from fuel savings.

Why do you need a boat so large​

I fully agree with you on larger boat for your purposes.

Deals to be found out there, ie. Searay, Carver, others

That is entirely the point of my original post, there are reasonable prices for motor yachts out there and it has me thinking that my be the route to consider. I'm not finding what I would call comparable in the trawler market unless they are 30 or more years old.​

That's because the boats aren't comparable. Didn't cost the same to build or the same new. Trawlers are much more expensive than cruisers like those mentioned. There is a lot more boat in a 50' trawler than a 50' Sea Ray. By comparison a Kadey Krogen 52 new will run 65-70% more than a 52 Carver.
Your question is like asking why you can't find a used Mercedes for the same price as a Ford of the same year.
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Some follow up above.
 
OP, not sure your thinking about comfort on the Lakes vs. the ocean are correct.

Our PT 41 trawler was way more comfortable on the Atlantic than on Lake Michigan. Most trawlers are semi displacement, relatively flat bottomed hulls. They get very "pitchy" at low speeds. ESPECIALLY with a beam or a quartering sea.

Wavelengths in the ocean are generally longer, we didn't get tossed from side to side as much.

We ended up selling the trawler and buying a 32 ft. express cruiser. Way more comfortable. A deep V fishing type boat (Viking, Cabo, etc.) would be more comfortable still.
 
On more thing if I may. If we go the motor yacht route with the bigger horsepower engines designed for planning the boat, is that going to cause issues with hour after hour of slow speeds?



It may. There are differing opinions on this topic. I can say that our previous owners went slow and our turbos, exhaust tubes, and aftercoolers were coated with thick soot. He even told us he ran it up to 80% at the end of every trip. Once we started going fast, it has decided to deposit itself on our transom. We are still working it all out :)
 
On more thing if I may. If we go the motor yacht route with the bigger horsepower engines designed for planning the boat, is that going to cause issues with hour after hour of slow speeds?


I suspect it depends... on the engines, what "slow" means, etc.

You can probably ask about results with specific engines, once you have some candidates in mind.

Hasn't seemed to bother our Cummins 450s, but I don't have experience with other models.

There are several threads on the thought, although I'm hard-pressed to think of a useful query argument that would easily bring those to the surface for you...

But you could also just open up a new query on just that topic, and everyone here who really knows engines (and previous threads) could likely chime in...

-Chris
 
'On more thing if I may. If we go the motor yacht route with the bigger horsepower engines designed for planning the boat, is that going to cause issues with hour after hour of slow speeds?"

Gas engines do not slobber if constantly lightly loaded big diesels may.

The bigger hassle with a fast built boat at slow trawler crawler speeds is poor handling.

BUT if the AP can handle it , why worry?
 
Our Lake Michigan based Ocean Alexander 440 just might be for sale after this summer...more likely after summer of 2019. Efficient, Great lakes friendly, semi-displacement Monk hull design. ~1500 hours. I believe it's one of two 44s remaining on the Lakes. Properly sized engines for a semi displacement design. I cruise it at 8.5 knots (turbos slightly on boost). Max speed is 17. We've been using it as a summer live aboard (four months) for a decade. Very nice condition. Price should be within your range. Well maintained. Handsome boat with spectacular interior. PM me if it might be of interest. Never know...

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Our Great Lakes based Ocean Alexander 440 just might be for sale after this summer...more likely after summer of 2019. Efficient, Great lakes friendly, semi-displacement Monk hull design. ~1500 hours. I cruise it at 8.5 knots. Max is 17. We've been using it as a summer live aboard for a decade. Very nice condition. Price should be within your stated max. Well maintained. Pretty boat with spectacular interior. PM me if it might be of interest. Never know...

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Very nice boat - the 440 was produced between 1987 and 1999, which year is yours? Does it have the Cats and if yes which version of them?
 
Thanks. Don't want to hijack the original thread with a side discussion about this particular boat.

I will say that we went through the exact same thought process as the OP when shopping for a Great Lakes live aboard, and this was our solution. Outside living space was by far our primary consideration, and the sundeck configuration filled that bill. Trunk cabin configuration is great, but not for a Great Lakes summer live aboard. Same for most sedans. Sundeck keeps you up in the breeze and out of the bugs (for the most part), and provides a great field of view above other boats. We live outside unless it's raining.

Next was a water level cockpit for easy dinghy access. Then came all the rest. (I'd be happy to discuss particulars of this particular boat in a PM if you think you might be in the market in a year or two). Regards.
 
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Thanks. Don't want to hijack the original thread with a side discussion about this particular boat.

That boat does show though very clearly that there are a lot of potential options that don't fit into the definition some have of Trawlers. Some would call your OA a Trawler and some wouldn't. Regardless, it's a good middle ground option.
 
Hello fellow boaters,

I've barely posted since joining a couple years ago but read this forum almost daily. Learned a lot here and helped us narrow down the choices for the next boat. Thank you for the free education!

Some background...nearing retirement and looking for a summer liveaboard. We plan to sell our home so it would be the boat in the summer and RV snowbirds in the winter.

Currently have a 2006 Four Winns Vista 378 that we enjoy on Lake Michigan / Green Bay.

This is where my rant comes in. Our boat only has 300 hours on the gas engines. It is truly near showroom condition including the shiny gelcoat. It's in such good shape I would offer a warranty to a private buyer. We probably will end up selling for $125k to $130.

Purchasing the next boat (Trawler type) 45' to 52', we were hoping to stay under $200k. However, scouring Yachtworld and broker sites, it seems like anything under that price is 30+ years old, engine hours north of 4,000, outdated electronics, worn interiors and faded/caulky exteriors. Not understanding the high asking prices for most of these boats when compared to much newer express cruisers and motoryachts? End of rant, just had to vent because it has been very discouraging!

Thinking of changing plans to a cockpit motoryacht?
:nonono: Gas engines are a turn:mad: off.
 
From what I've read, the older diesels that were large, cast iron, and limited horsepower are the source of the reputation about diesel robustness and economy.

The newer modern diesels where they get 300hp out of a small package via turbo charging, electronic control, etc., do not have the same reputation because the engines are stressed more to generate that HP and all the gadgets that make it possible add failure points.

My understanding is that diesels are more expensive up front, are more expensive to maintain, but may have longer life and better fuel economy compared to gas engines. It would depend on the particular use of the specific boat as to whether diesels or gas are the better choice.
 
From what I've read, the older diesels that were large, cast iron, and limited horsepower are the source of the reputation about diesel robustness and economy.

The newer modern diesels where they get 300hp out of a small package via turbo charging, electronic control, etc., do not have the same reputation because the engines are stressed more to generate that HP and all the gadgets that make it possible add failure points.

My understanding is that diesels are more expensive up front, are more expensive to maintain, but may have longer life and better fuel economy compared to gas engines. It would depend on the particular use of the specific boat as to whether diesels or gas are the better choice.

I've never owned one of the older diesels, but understand the new modern diesels are not all that new in design. Turbo and Common Rail and Electronic Control have long since passed out of the period of new. They have excellent reputations and dependability. My experience is with 110 hp to 2895 hp.

Now, I'm still agreeing that for the lakes and inland cruising, gas can be a good option. The vast majority of boats there are gas.
 
Gas engines do not slobber if constantly lightly loaded big diesels may.

The bigger hassle with a fast built boat at slow trawler crawler speeds is poor handling.

BUT if the AP can handle it , why worry?


And that could mean big two-stroke DDs may slobber... but it could also be that newer 4-strokes, not so much.

For OP, the handling could indeed be an issue, but FWIW we've found any sea state we're comfortable in at slow speeds works fine. And the A/P works. If we start getting uncomfortable, usually planing solves that... or sometimes tacking is an additional help... or else it's time to make port.

-Chris
 
And that could mean big two-stroke DDs may slobber... but it could also be that newer 4-strokes, not so much.
suffering weather delays, or
For OP, the handling could indeed be an issue, but FWIW we've found any sea state we're comfortable in at slow speeds works fine. And the A/P works. If we start getting uncomfortable, usually planing solves that... or sometimes tacking is an additional help... or else it's time to make port.

-Chris

Older highly boosted four stroke diesels also slobber at slow speeds...regardless of hull type (planing or semi-planing). The twin 375 Grand Banks from the '90s come to mind.

I believe the OPs point (which I agree with) is that the Great Lakes have many, many days where a planing hull at slow speeds is an unacceptable combination. So the owner either spends an inordinate amount of time enduring weather delays or is forced to pound through the rough stuff on plane. A semi-planing hull suffers the same issues, but to a lesser extent. Of course some semi-planning hull designs are better than others. The Ed Monk Jr. designed semi-planing hull on our boat is among the best in my opinion. Grand Banks, not so much. With some exceptions, the grouping of semi-displacement hulls from Taiwan (Marine Trader, Albin, CHB) don't have enough installed power to operate comfortably in the "hump plus" (12+ knot) speed range. Again, there are exceptions.

If you're retired like the OP will be, then perhaps sitting in the slip and waiting on calm conditions isn't an issue. But I can say for sure that the number of days of two footers or less on Lake Michigan were hard to come by last summer. Our little marina made a tidy profit on transient boaters...many of them loopers... who were delayed by wind and waves.
 
Older highly boosted four stroke diesels also slobber at slow speeds...regardless of hull type (planing or semi-planing). The twin 375 Grand Banks from the '90s come to mind.

I believe the OPs point (which I agree with) is that the Great Lakes have many, many days where a planing hull at slow speeds is an unacceptable combination.


What engines are those twin 375s?

Your point about sea states is well taken. OTOH, that might equally be in argument in favor of a motor yacht. Around where we are, it's often benign enough to go slow, even with our planing hull. I dunno Great Lakes... but maybe a planing hull would overcome weather slightly more often than would a slower hull?

Not intending to suggest planing is a universal solution, of course.... but sometimes we can get out "comfortably" (relatively) in sloppy weather whereas beam seas (especially) going very slow wouldn't be fun.

-Chris
 
The biggest difference is the build of most trawlers as opposed to a cruiser. Trawlers are built to go out into blue water either coastal cruising or crossing oceans. Most of your smaller "gas" boats are not.
 
The biggest difference is the build of most trawlers as opposed to a cruiser. Trawlers are built to go out into blue water either coastal cruising or crossing oceans. Most of your smaller "gas" boats are not.

But not talking small gas boats and the mention was made of 2' or less seas. Well, other than perhaps some small bowriders any boat should be capable of handling greater than that. 3-4' is just a norm to me. Obviously, the period is an important part of it. However, the boats being discussed here are built quite well to handle Great Lakes conditions.
 
What engines are those twin 375s?

Your point about sea states is well taken. OTOH, that might equally be in argument in favor of a motor yacht. Around where we are, it's often benign enough to go slow, even with our planing hull. I dunno Great Lakes... but maybe a planing hull would overcome weather slightly more often than would a slower hull?

Not intending to suggest planing is a universal solution, of course.... but sometimes we can get out "comfortably" (relatively) in sloppy weather whereas beam seas (especially) going very slow wouldn't be fun.

-Chris

The engines I was thinking of were Cats. And I just checked and noted a couple of '90s vintage 46 GB with twin 425 intercooled 3208s. One ad noted the boat will make a whole 18 knots! Now there's the undisputed king of slobbering combos (for a semi-displacement design) at hull speed.

Yes, a planing motoryacht might make sense for the OP. Big bang for the buck from Carver, Cruisers and other mass produced boats. We looked at a lot of them when shopping. Bought the OA for the open sundeck and flybridge layout and the interior as much as anything. Does have a nice ride in rough stuff though.
 
"they are significantly cheaper to operate (with diesel) than a 38ft gas boat, probably half as much."

This is only true if maint , oil changes , filters and repair parts are not counted , and the gasser is operated well above trawler speeds.

Operate at the Sq RT of the LWL for speed in Knots as many trawlers do (-30-50 hp) and gas is cheap to keep.

A vacuum gauge is a great help on a gasser , to stay below the secondaries opening , if you want to go a bit faster.

"Plus I think they just look cool."

Ego is expensive ,

A $4.00 spark plug vs a $75 injector rebuild , the requirement for super cleaned diesel fuel and the ease of repair make the seasonal or annual cost of diesels at least on par with gas.

Now if you run 200 -300+ days a year the diesel will have an advantage in fuel cost , and the higher repair PM costs can be OK.

At local cruising 200 hours a year many times a gas boat is a far better buy , the difference in interest on a loan may pay for all summers cruise

Fred - You hit many nails on the head! :thumb:
 
But not talking small gas boats and the mention was made of 2' or less seas. Well, other than perhaps some small bowriders any boat should be capable of handling greater than that. 3-4' is just a norm to me. Obviously, the period is an important part of it. However, the boats being discussed here are built quite well to handle Great Lakes conditions.

Period and wave shape are indeed important. Sure, any boat in this discussion can handle 4 footers. and much more. But many operators don't particularly like traveling in the very close coupled and steep waves that pile up along the eastern side of Lake Michigan with prevailing west winds. I depart with forecast 3-4's all the time...and often get caught in 5-6s with occasional 7s a few miles offshore. Many are more cautious.
 
The biggest difference is the build of most trawlers as opposed to a cruiser. Trawlers are built to go out into blue water either coastal cruising or crossing oceans. Most of your smaller "gas" boats are not.


Given that "trawler" is a marketing term more than anything else, I wouldn't assume that "most trawlers" are any stouter of build than most motor yachts... nor would I assume that many of the "trawlers" are up to cruising oceans.

Which isn't a criticism of either "most trawlers" or motor yachts, just an observation.

We appreciate well-built when the Chesapeake kicks up with short-period chop (not uncommon); if the Great Lakes are similar, I can see where sometimes relatively benign-sounding numbers can make your teeth hurt. Even that doesn't mean our ride needs to be engineered for ocean passages, though. :)

-Chris
 
Given that "trawler" is a marketing term more than anything else, I wouldn't assume that "most trawlers" are any stouter of build than most motor yachts... nor would I assume that many of the "trawlers" are up to cruising oceans.

Which isn't a criticism of either "most trawlers" or motor yachts, just an observation.

We appreciate well-built when the Chesapeake kicks up with short-period chop (not uncommon); if the Great Lakes are similar, I can see where sometimes relatively benign-sounding numbers can make your teeth hurt. Even that doesn't mean our ride needs to be engineered for ocean passages, though. :)

-Chris

Chesapeake and Great Lakes are very similar. What they have in common is large open areas where the wind can hit from all directions and land not really providing much of a shield.

Growing up on a small lake, I know that all of us ocean cruisers, myself included now, seem to forget lakes like the one we were on can ever get rough. We think of calm lakes. Well, Lake Norman is during the week if the wind isn't blowing and very early and very late on weekends. However, when working people can get on it, it's typically very choppy in many areas just from boat wakes. When you have nice large wakes hitting from all directions it's quite rough. However, there's one additional part of the lake. At one part of the lake it's 9 miles wide. When the wind is strong and coming from the right direction there are occasions in which the wind waves are 3-4'. We've had sailboat regattas on July 4 or other times cancelled because it was too rough. There are no ocean crossing vessels on the lake but there is some rough boating for small bowriders and wake boats and pontoons.
 
Period and wave shape are indeed important. Sure, any boat in this discussion can handle 4 footers. and much more. But many operators don't particularly like traveling in the very close coupled and steep waves that pile up along the eastern side of Lake Michigan with prevailing west winds. I depart with forecast 3-4's all the time...and often get caught in 5-6s with occasional 7s a few miles offshore. Many are more cautious.

Sounds like the sea states we often get in LI sound with the opposing tide fighting the wind. We always found the boat was capable of taking on more than we would typically choose but sometimes the weather would change quickly in LI sound and it was good to be able to make choices that included higher speeds that often would be a better ride than a hull speed cruise.

The OP was very concerned about range - how does the range work out with the 44 OA? Usable fuel capacity and typical burn rate at speed?
 
OP here again. I see my education continues! I've never had the opportunity to ride in a trawler. Just assumed all you ocean guys and gals, many trading in sailboats for the creature comforts of a trawler, found the perfect all around boat for livability, range and ride comfort. Figured it would work for us also. Just thought that we would need a slow heavy boat to drive through waves instead of bouncing over them.

A page or two back someone mentioned their trawler handled great on the ocean leg of the loop but got beat up in Lake Michigan. What an eye opener! I can't thank all you folks enough. Our search has changed from trawler type to motor yacht.

Only confusion remaining is diesels and extended low RPM usage. Our current gas engine boat has an optimum cruising speed of 25 mph (per manufacturer data) turning 3600 rpm getting 0.7 miles per gallon. We can afford this fuel usage now, but when retired with no time constraints and cruising greater distances, would prefer much lower fuel consumption.

Thanks again. BTW Rufus, beautiful OA. You are not hijacking the tread by any means!
 
We were in a different but similar position several years ago. Working full time we wanted a boat that opened our weather windows for travel to the Bahamas, Chesapeake and along the east coast. We went with a cockpit motor yacht/fly bridge cruiser. We got a Viking sport cruiser/princess 50 ft flybridge. 9 seasons later this has been an excellent choice

We go slow as often as we can or time allows. Slow cruise is 8 knots, fast cruise is 19 knots and WOT 26 knots. Slow saves fuel and is easier on equipment, fast is most stable in beam seas due to hydrodynamic stability. Typical nice weather 200 mile cruise from say Nassau to ft lauderdale is 4 hours slow cruise and 1 hour 19 knots alternating. No engine build up and no engine soot except momentarily getting on plane after a few hours 8 knot cruise. Plenty of fuel, we maybe use half our fuel over 200 miles in this way.

We chose Viking sport cruiser because 20 degree dead rise aft, steeper forefoot and a sharp entry. So a deeper vee than most comparable US built flybridge cruisers. Some of the British built boats (princess, sun seeker) claim a deeper vee design for the English Channel and nearby steeper seas. The result is a 40,000 lb boat that handles steeper seas such as the Chesapeake or pimlico sounds well. But I have to say the worse conditions we have seen have been in the Gulf Stream when significant storms form or the passage from the abacos to harbor island

We also love the open layout of the Viking/princess sport cruisers. We spend weeks at a time as a family of four on our 50.
 
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OP here again. I see my education continues! I've never had the opportunity to ride in a trawler. Just assumed all you ocean guys and gals, many trading in sailboats for the creature comforts of a trawler, found the perfect all around boat for livability, range and ride comfort. Figured it would work for us also. Just thought that we would need a slow heavy boat to drive through waves instead of bouncing over them.

A page or two back someone mentioned their trawler handled great on the ocean leg of the loop but got beat up in Lake Michigan. What an eye opener! I can't thank all you folks enough. Our search has changed from trawler type to motor yacht.

Only confusion remaining is diesels and extended low RPM usage. Our current gas engine boat has an optimum cruising speed of 25 mph (per manufacturer data) turning 3600 rpm getting 0.7 miles per gallon. We can afford this fuel usage now, but when retired with no time constraints and cruising greater distances, would prefer much lower fuel consumption.

Thanks again. BTW Rufus, beautiful OA. You are not hijacking the tread by any means!

IMHO - when it comes to your typical 4 stroke 6 cylinder turbo diesel (Cummins, Perkins, Hino, etc) running slow does not make it into the top 10 reasons why the engines would have a problem. I do not know how 'extended' or low you mean by low rpm usage but it is not a significant problem and can be easily minimized even if you really intend "slow and extended".
There are many other items to get on your list for your 'best choice' boat.
 
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