Buying a boat but it doesn't start

R055

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Jul 13, 2015
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The seller contacted my on Saturday that he changed the fuse box and cleaned all the contacts in the ignition system and the boat runs good now. We test drove it yesterday and if ran great(only thing was the test drive was only 10 minutes because the waves were huge yesterday with high winds so I didn't like the sound of the boat dropping on the waves so hard). But the test drive was good and motor ran great. He's also including 2 tubes, 3 wakeboards, and 3 knee boards with purchase. I gave him a deposit and will pick the boat up middle of this week.
 
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tlombard

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Jun 26, 2007
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The seller contacted my on Saturday that he changed the fuse box and cleaned all the contacts in the ignition system and the boat runs good now. We test drove it yesterday and if ran great(only thing was the test drive was only 10 minutes because the waves were huge yesterday with high winds so I didn't like the sound of the boat dropping on the waves so hard). But the test drive was good and motor ran great. He's also including 2 tubes, 3 wakeboards, and 3 knee boards with purchase. I gave him a deposit and will pick the boat up middle of this week.


Congrats!
 

R055

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Congrats!

Yup im pretty stoked. We had 2 weeks of good weather and the boat prices on Craigslist skyrocketed, I feel like I got it just in time before prices started rising. I should resurrect my thread I started last fall about questions I had about buying a boat šŸ˜€
 

thumpar

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The prices have spiked here also with tons for sale now. There was barely anything listed but decent prices but it is crazy after it warms up.
 

R055

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The prices have spiked here also with tons for sale now. There was barely anything listed but decent prices but it is crazy after it warms up.

Yup the prices went from 6-8k for 18-19 foot 2000-2004 bow rider to about 9-12k in a matter of 2 weeks. The other reason I'm stoked about this boat is the 4.3 engine because all the others I looked at that were 2002+ and under 6k had the 3.0 and usally crappy ripped interior. This one has the 4.3 and almost perfect interior with 0 rips.
 

tlombard

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It's a great feeling to make that find isn't it! I had to go well over my budget and move up my timeline when I ran across the boat I bought in December but she's got about 125% of what I had on my wish list to begin with so it was worth it. The warmer weather is certainly torture though. I thought the past few months were bad with the temperatures being freezing and dreaming of summer and boating but that isn't anything compared to the torture recently with beautiful weather which makes you want to take her out for a spin but the reality is that it will drop back below freezing for a few days at least another time or two in my area in the next month. Being so close yet so far is not fun.
 

R055

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Yup^^^
I'm going to buy it and tow it to my house today but it's suppose to be raining today and for the next 2 weeks, should I tow it with cover on? I don't want the boat interior getting soaked because no sun in the next 2 weeks.
 

oldjeep

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If the cover is trailerable. Otherwise put it in the garage with a fan when you get home and make sure to dry between the cushions. If you are planning on storing outside then Iguess you will find out if the cover is any good.
 

tlombard

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I've never towed a boat with a cover on it but as long as the cover is suitable, that would be a good idea. Somebody else probably has better advice on towing with a cover than me though. I see covers that say they are fine for towing but I don't know. Some people swear it is fine. Some people swear it isn't.

The reason I've never towed with a cover on is that I've never had to deal with rain when picking one up and never gone to the river or lake when it was raining and never had to actually think about it. I still haven't put the cover on the boat I just bought but I picked her up and took her straight to a warehouse to store for the winter. I bought a cover and just haven't made it back to the warehouse to put it on yet. I haven't wanted to deal with it when it was cold out since the warehouse isn't heated (still warmer than outside by far though) and then when the weather's been nice I was just afraid to deal with it. I am afraid that I'd end up hooking her up and taking her out!
 

R055

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If the cover is trailerable. Otherwise put it in the garage with a fan when you get home and make sure to dry between the cushions. If you are planning on storing outside then Iguess you will find out if the cover is any good.

Thats the thing, my garage is full so can't make enough room in the garage for it. The boat has the 2 snap on covers and then the full boat cover.
 

oldjeep

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Thats the thing, my garage is full so can't make enough room in the garage for it. The boat has the 2 snap on covers and then the full boat cover.

Best make sure that those covers are good enough for outside then. Nothing ruins a Bayliner/Maxum faster than letting the floors and upholstery get and stay wet.
 

Old Ironmaker

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Dec 28, 2015
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There are mooring covers and travel covers. I have towed the boat with a mooring cover but it needs to be tight, tight. Regardless a travel cover is best. Which is yours?
 

R055

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I'm guessing its the mooring cover because the seller recommended me to trailer it without the cover. But I don't want to soak the interior and have it wet for at least 2 weeks.
 

bruceb58

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Since you don't know the cover and how well it tows, I would tow it without the cover. A days worth of rain is not going to hurt anything.
 

Texasmark

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The seller contacted my on Saturday that he changed the fuse box and cleaned all the contacts in the ignition system and the boat runs good now. We test drove it yesterday and if ran great(only thing was the test drive was only 10 minutes because the waves were huge yesterday with high winds so I didn't like the sound of the boat dropping on the waves so hard). But the test drive was good and motor ran great. He's also including 2 tubes, 3 wakeboards, and 3 knee boards with purchase. I gave him a deposit and will pick the boat up middle of this week.

Outstanding. You got a taste of what it could do in a "situation" right off. Better than learning the hard way. Glad he got her fixed for your test drive. Gives him some credibility. Hopefully he gave you some pointers while he (I guess) was navigating the waves. While we are talking about waves, I don't remember if you are new to boating or not, but on any body of water it helps to have a current weather report and keep one eye on the weather. Don't wait till it's on you, when you see one brewing, head for the dock. If you want, you can wait it out and go back out when it passes over. Sure beats getting caught out in a storm.

When I was growing up on the Texas coast, in the mornings things were beautifully tranquil. Over the course of the day, most every day, the wind would increase in intensity to the point that in the afternoon, it would be up 15-20 mph and the bays would be full of white caps. Nice thing about that was that the seas were following so the ride back to the dock was soft and dry even though you were burying the bow in the next wave.....helped to have a good flare to the bow and a closed deck and windshield.

Another one of the problems there was afternoon squalls. The water circulation cycle from surface to atmosphere to surface was such that around noonish, you'd see the Cumulous Clouds collecting and then they would change from white to grey to near black, the sky would blacken and here'd come the squall. High winds whipping the water into a frothy turmoil and then It would rain cats and dogs for 5ish minutes and then poof....all dissipated and seas were gently rolling.

So, to stay out of trouble it helped that you knew these things and kept a keen eye to catch them before they caught you.

Good luck.

Mark
 

R055

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Joined
Jul 13, 2015
Messages
579
Outstanding. You got a taste of what it could do in a "situation" right off. Better than learning the hard way. Glad he got her fixed for your test drive. Gives him some credibility. Hopefully he gave you some pointers while he (I guess) was navigating the waves. While we are talking about waves, I don't remember if you are new to boating or not, but on any body of water it helps to have a current weather report and keep one eye on the weather. Don't wait till it's on you, when you see one brewing, head for the dock. If you want, you can wait it out and go back out when it passes over. Sure beats getting caught out in a storm.

When I was growing up on the Texas coast, in the mornings things were beautifully tranquil. Over the course of the day, most every day, the wind would increase in intensity to the point that in the afternoon, it would be up 15-20 mph and the bays would be full of white caps. Nice thing about that was that the seas were following so the ride back to the dock was soft and dry even though you were burying the bow in the next wave.....helped to have a good flare to the bow and a closed deck and windshield.

Another one of the problems there was afternoon squalls. The water circulation cycle from surface to atmosphere to surface was such that around noonish, you'd see the Cumulous Clouds collecting and then they would change from white to grey to near black, the sky would blacken and here'd come the squall. High winds whipping the water into a frothy turmoil and then It would rain cats and dogs for 5ish minutes and then poof....all dissipated and seas were gently rolling.

So, to stay out of trouble it helped that you knew these things and kept a keen eye to catch them before they caught you.

Good luck.

Mark

Thanks I'm going to use it on lakes only that aren't big enough to be a weather danger.

I was able to trailer it home with the tarps tied up nicely and had no problems during the 2 hour drive. Was also surprised by all the extra goodies the owner gave. Gave me 2 tubes, 3 wakeboards, 3 knee boards, 2 wet suits, a bikini top I never knew he had, the original boat and engine manuals, and some other misc stuff he had for the boat.
 

tpenfield

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Thanks I'm going to use it on lakes only that aren't big enough to be a weather danger.

I was able to trailer it home with the tarps tied up nicely and had no problems during the 2 hour drive. Was also surprised by all the extra goodies the owner gave. Gave me 2 tubes, 3 wakeboards, 3 knee boards, 2 wet suits, a bikini top I never knew he had, the original boat and engine manuals, and some other misc stuff he had for the boat.

A bikini top ??? sounds interesting . . . probably wasn't his though. :D
 
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