Many questions on a 1994 v19 superfisherman

mphy98

Lieutenant
Joined
Oct 20, 2008
Messages
1,422
Ok I bought this sight unseen, just pictures. They looked great and the owner of Brian's Marina seemed like a stand up guy. Anyone know him? I don't want to bug him with a lot of questions so I will ask here.

1. How big of gas tank.

2. How many live wells.

3 any one have a brosure?

4 any other info would be great thanks. bob

Haven't picked it up yet. Maybe next week. This is killing me!!:D
 
Last edited:

jasoutside

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Dec 20, 2009
Messages
13,269
Re: Many questions on a 1994 v19 superfisherman

Well mphy, normally here is where I'd say...

"You came to the right place!"

But honestly, most of us around here take really super old metal Starcraft hulls and try to make them look like the one you just bought! So, we may be shy a few details on your newer rig, sorry man. Hopefully someone in the know can jump in.

You'll have a sweet rig there and I am sure that we'll be drooling over it.

Thanks for swinging by, and be sure to give us some photos when you finally get her!:D

Cheers
 

Starman8

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Sep 17, 2010
Messages
630
Re: Many questions on a 1994 v19 superfisherman

I owned a 2000, and was a nice boat. The 90's Star's had some issues, so check for these:

If the hull has a keel plate starting at the belly to near the transom, see if it has a hollow open end. You are looking for a triangular strip attached on the centerline. If it does, this unnecessary attachment has allowed seepage through the rivet canals created when attached. People have tried to peen rivets on this area, but the gauge difference between the hull and plate is like paper versus cardboard.

They also forget that when they put the boat in the water, the hollow canal fills, and seeps, and when on the go, the pressure accentuates the flow into the hull.

Look at the belly for any breaks in paint along the seams of said attachment(keelplate).

Look for paint breaks(rings) around hull rivets and finger test each one for movement.

Check the port and Star sides where the splashwell attaches to the sidewall(gunwale). If any are totally separated, the cause could be stress on the hull laterally.

I am no expert, but dealt with a few models built in that timeframe, and I also discussed these issues directly with a Starcraft engineer.

I purchased a 79 SS18 sight unseen for $1000 because it was $1000.

Any boat that has a price tag that is market to the year(expensive) on later models requires an inspection and a hull flooding, and an on water test if allowable.

That's just the boat, what about the power?

Livewells are for tournaments, coolers are for fish harvest, and catch and release is just that, for sport. Many fisherman with expensive Star's when fishing for meat use coolers because the livewells, especially in summer, are a sauna bath and cook your fish.

They also use bait buckets hung over the side, even on a brand new $40,000 rig.
 
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