relevante
Member
- Messages
- 5
- Reaction score
- 3
- Points
- 12
- Boat Make
- Boatless
- Year
- 2020
- Boat Model
- SX
- Boat Length
- 19
Hello all,
We're about to jump into our first boat and I'm pretty sold on the Yamaha lineup. I was pretty much ready to pull the trigger on one of a few 2013 - 2014 242 models that I've found in the area when the 2021 prerelease program was announced. Two dealers that I'd previously talked to contacted me, and it seems like I could get right in line for the new 195S that I was hoping to buy when I initially started shopping, before learning they were all sold out.
So now I'm faced with a dilemma: smaller boat new or bigger boat used? Up front cost of both appears to be roughly equal.
I'm sure it's an apples to oranges kind of comparison, but I honestly don't know enough about boats to really know for sure what I'm getting or missing on either side.
We're a family of 4 with two small but quickly growing kids (6 and 7). The idea of boating definitely gained momentum because of COVID and the lockdowns, social distancing, etc, but we gave the idea some consideration last summer too, so it's not entirely that. Our initial goal though is of course just something fun to do outside with the kids, cruising the nearby river and lakes, finding spots to swim, doing some tubing, and hopefully transitioning at some point into skiing and/or boarding (snow skiing has been our big family activity in that time of year, so it seems like a natural way to continue that energy throughout the summer).
I'm sure at some point we'll have other kids or maybe another family on the boat hanging out, but we're not really party people or anything anymore, so in terms of interior space, the 195 felt ample. But I wonder how advantageous the other nice things about a bigger boat (better ride, etc). I could also see eventually possibly wanting to occasionally go cruise around in the Long Island Sound or who knows, maybe just offshore in the Atlantic on a really nice day once we've gotten more experience on the water. How much of this is doable/a good idea in a 195 or a 242?
I'm plenty mechanically inclined to be able to research and fix basically anything that would go wrong with an older boat, but I'm also busy enough that I'd rather not have to. I'm a little worried that a 2013 boat is just on the edge of becoming an ongoing project to keep going. I'm fine with, and would sometimes enjoy, an occasional mechanical project, I just don't want to end up in a situation where it's constantly in need of something. How are these boats generally in this regard, provided I find one that was well maintained?
Finally, as a first time boat owner, is a 195 going to be easier to manage for things like getting on and off the trailer, etc? I've had control of a boat once or twice, but only on the open water. I'm comfortable with trailers and have a full size pickup to tow with, so I'm fine with that side of things, but a touch less confident about the first few times out with the boat itself, although I'm confident it'll become second nature pretty quickly.
So anyway, it feels pretty much like a tossup between the two. My bias one way or the other changes moment to moment. Any thoughts on the above or other advantages/disadvantages one way or the other that I'm not considering?
Finally, it's also worth mentioning that we're renting an 18' bowrider of some sort on one of the finger lakes on Sunday as a test run to both be sure the whole thing is something that we're as into as we think we will be, and to get at least some sort of a baseline experience of size, power, etc.
Thanks.
We're about to jump into our first boat and I'm pretty sold on the Yamaha lineup. I was pretty much ready to pull the trigger on one of a few 2013 - 2014 242 models that I've found in the area when the 2021 prerelease program was announced. Two dealers that I'd previously talked to contacted me, and it seems like I could get right in line for the new 195S that I was hoping to buy when I initially started shopping, before learning they were all sold out.
So now I'm faced with a dilemma: smaller boat new or bigger boat used? Up front cost of both appears to be roughly equal.
I'm sure it's an apples to oranges kind of comparison, but I honestly don't know enough about boats to really know for sure what I'm getting or missing on either side.
We're a family of 4 with two small but quickly growing kids (6 and 7). The idea of boating definitely gained momentum because of COVID and the lockdowns, social distancing, etc, but we gave the idea some consideration last summer too, so it's not entirely that. Our initial goal though is of course just something fun to do outside with the kids, cruising the nearby river and lakes, finding spots to swim, doing some tubing, and hopefully transitioning at some point into skiing and/or boarding (snow skiing has been our big family activity in that time of year, so it seems like a natural way to continue that energy throughout the summer).
I'm sure at some point we'll have other kids or maybe another family on the boat hanging out, but we're not really party people or anything anymore, so in terms of interior space, the 195 felt ample. But I wonder how advantageous the other nice things about a bigger boat (better ride, etc). I could also see eventually possibly wanting to occasionally go cruise around in the Long Island Sound or who knows, maybe just offshore in the Atlantic on a really nice day once we've gotten more experience on the water. How much of this is doable/a good idea in a 195 or a 242?
I'm plenty mechanically inclined to be able to research and fix basically anything that would go wrong with an older boat, but I'm also busy enough that I'd rather not have to. I'm a little worried that a 2013 boat is just on the edge of becoming an ongoing project to keep going. I'm fine with, and would sometimes enjoy, an occasional mechanical project, I just don't want to end up in a situation where it's constantly in need of something. How are these boats generally in this regard, provided I find one that was well maintained?
Finally, as a first time boat owner, is a 195 going to be easier to manage for things like getting on and off the trailer, etc? I've had control of a boat once or twice, but only on the open water. I'm comfortable with trailers and have a full size pickup to tow with, so I'm fine with that side of things, but a touch less confident about the first few times out with the boat itself, although I'm confident it'll become second nature pretty quickly.
So anyway, it feels pretty much like a tossup between the two. My bias one way or the other changes moment to moment. Any thoughts on the above or other advantages/disadvantages one way or the other that I'm not considering?
Finally, it's also worth mentioning that we're renting an 18' bowrider of some sort on one of the finger lakes on Sunday as a test run to both be sure the whole thing is something that we're as into as we think we will be, and to get at least some sort of a baseline experience of size, power, etc.
Thanks.