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Shark1007

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Posts posted by Shark1007

  1. Yet to receive ANY type of reply or follow-up from Lee even though they seem to have a dedicated area for internet inquiries.

    Not that they owe any response but it sure would have benefitted them had they addressed the issue.

    Ben

    I think you just met Steve, I think is his name. Your comments have been heard before, I have dealt with him and found him gruff, pissy and extremely knowledgeable. If you have an issue, call and speak to Brian Lee and mention that his guy needs a tune up.

    I broke two outriggers during the hurricanes in the Bahamas and 'ole grouchy Steve sent me the stuff for repair in two days, I didn't even get the description of the problem out and he told me what I needed. He's grouchy, but usually right, I hate that!

  2. I agree with the above posts , not quality craftsmanship and lets not forget the 230lb fat guy [ Me ] bouncing off the waves at 30 knots standing in the same spot on the deck . That's a buttload of pounds , pounding the deck .

    Add all that together and wallah , a smushy deck/hatch .

    The biggest culprit I've found is water intrusion from console screws having been installed without sealant, T Top screws and other deck penetrations start the water issue. When I buy a boat, I remove everything I can and rebed.

  3. We have four Cruisairs on the 54 Hatt that I run (1 each for the salon, owner's stateroom, fwd stateroom, and the staboard stateroom). When they're all on, the boat can be cooled to a ridiculously cool temp, on even a 100-degree day. The downside is that they need clean, 50-amp service, which some marinas don't supply. To compensate, we have a power-conditioner installed on the 50 AMP circuit. Without it, half the units would trip their control panels, returning a low-voltage error on the displays.

    BTW, that's never a problem when running on the genset (20 KW).

    My crew always said they coulld tell if I was sleeping on the boat... they could see the condensate dripping off the side of the boat before they got to the slip. I like it cool too. Tell me about the power conditioner, I have the low voltage crap on my Hatteras at the marina.

  4. Folks

    I'm spending money like a drunken sailor "cherrying" out my 38 Special Bertram. The a.c. in the cabin was adequate, but you had to wait a while for it to cool the cabin and it was a bit noisy from the 20 year old compressor.

    It's always a financial judgement on what to do, but I bit the bullet and replaced the old cruisair self contained unit with a new one using the SMXII controls with the remote. What an improvement! the new one is super quiet and will blow your hat off wile cooling the cabin completely in 1/10 the time of the old. The new controls are a dream and you can program a dehumidify mode which looks great to me! The new unit is much smaller, has a heavy plastic drip pan and seems engineered like it's from a different century.

    Just a kudo to cruisair,I think it's the best money on refurb I have spent so far, wish I had done it earlier, probably would have slept better.

  5. There is a boat I am interested in in Marathon but I would like to get a bunch of detailed pics and your opinion on the boats general condition

    Anyone near Marathon that could help out?

    I am just leaving for 5 days as my son is getting married tomorrow (Saturday the 16th ) I'll get back to you when I get back.

    Gus

    I may be looking at an Ocean Masher in Key West soon, if I don't fly, I can check the boat for 'ya. on the way down I will advise.

    Roger

  6. So I had my boat guy detail the boat before launching this past weekend. I provided a new bottle of Rejex for him to use. They seemed rushed to get it done probably due to really bad weather for the past couple weeks.

    Heres the question; How much would you think one would use to wax a 25' Cat?

    The bottle was in the boat and it seems like very little was used. Does this stuff go a real long way or did he not do the job? I ran the back of my hand over the hull and it didn't feel like it had wax on it like a car does. I have never used Rejex before so I have no idea if it gives the surface that feel of not

    Any thoughts out there?

    It goes a long way, one bottle did my 41 footer.

  7. There is some good talk about Delta . . . trying to get some better pics about the layout etc. but they are rare . . . even their website has few pics and most of those are very small and show few details

    Almost like they want to keep it a secret . . . I wonder why :504_shrugging:

    Had a friend who owned one and a guest fell pretty badly on the step setup, he was charging off the helm area to strike a fish. The boat company has been thru a lot of stuff last decade or so. When a guy named DeSouza owned them, things ran pretty well. Lately, they don't seem to produce anything over the last number of years, unrelated to the economy it seems. They were refurbing a friend's 41 Hatteras years back and he had to pull the boat out of there and finish it himself with a giant hassle. They have a 36 sitting outside today, older one that has been in the water, and a couple other brand boats that they are doing repairs on at the moment. I'd do a lot of research or chat with me privately if you need further advice on a Delta.

  8. The Delta's are an odd, but sturdy boat. The 36 is their only real sportfish I feel. There are several that have seemingly been on the market forever. The 36 has a strange step up then step down deal from the cockpit to the helm area. Delta's are primarily a commercial boat made here at Cape Canaveral by Canaveral Custom Boats. There's one on the next dock down and I frequently walk people by to look at the layout and ask if they can figure out what it is... very few can.

  9. Here's the way to do it... Cut the inner hull back 18 inches forward of the transom, bisecting the in the floor well. Remove the inner linerand piece of deck, being careful not to disturb the "skin" of the hull of the transom. Dig out all the rotted wood and all the foam and you can inspect the stringers at this point. Next, laminate several layers of marine ply to the skin of the transom from the inside. Build a coouple "knees" to affix the new transom to the hull. Glass the heck out of the ply and glass the pieces back together and you're done.

    The skin of the hull has a unique structural role and you don't want to cut it at all. You can get the foam commercially and refoam thru 3/4 plugs you cut in the deck.

    Jim: been there, I'm old too. Bought my 1976 20 footer from Gene Meaders in Sanford in 1976.

  10. I had a 1976 and it would pound in a sea. In the rivers, etc. it was a pretty good ride. I think pre 81 or 82 were the good boats and after they were cobias (cobalo nickname) and had troubles.

    I have a 1978 256 that I put a full transom on and a new 300 Zuke and it's perfect for leaving in the bahamas as I do with her.

    The fuel tank is foamed in and ya need a 4000 psi pressure washer to blow the foam away for removal. I think the 20 had 10 or 11 degree deadrise.

  11. Auguste

    Call me, I've had one for several years and know a lot about them, having done a lot of research before purchase. They are a superb platform. Bertram only made a few because they were too expensive with al the molded stuff in the cabin. The ride is totally different than the flybridge model, much better.

    I do recall getting some info on the 31 site, they referred to it as a 31 on steroids.

    Roger Helms 407-383-0724

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