Re: 1989 Bayliner Capri 2.3 OMC - what's the deal?
Well, I for one love McDonalds! So I guess I'm into the right boat. I have had a bunch of minor things go wrong (outside of the engine rebuild) that I could tell are just a symptom of neglect (plastic rail that the cover frame attaches to snapped off, speedo wouldn't work, trim solenoid blew, blower conked out, etc.). All of these I've fixed, but the one last thing that puzzles me is every weekend when I come back to the boat the darn battery is flat. The alternator checked out OK and I replaced the battery and sure enough by the next weekend the brand new one was flat. There are no wires hanging in water, and no, i haven't left the blower or marker lights on. I though maybe it was the auto-bilge so I disco'd it for a week but the battery still went flat. I'm going to put in a battery switch which will obviously remedy my problem, but I still can't help but wonder what is stealing all my juice.<br /><br />Now that all the little stuff has been fixed the boat runs really well. I suspect with the amount of attention I pay it it should stay this way. From a quality perspective I can tell the shifter is somewhat clunky, the steering isn't so precise and the hull is a little thin (pretty tough boat to drive in waves over a foot). Other than that I've grown pretty fond of it, and yes it is a pretty sexy boat. Which is precisely why my wife doesn't like me hanging around the docks in it without her!

<br /><br />Oh, and thanks for that link Anne, I guess i should have surfed a little more before I started a new thread on the same topic! That is actually what I've been told. They are merely entry level boats and perform like entry level boats. Well I'm an entry level boater so its perfectly fine with me! I also heard that now that they own Doral they are beginning to use some Doral technology which has made them better.<br />Cheers!