Re: O/b vs I/b all things equal
We
are talking about pleasure use aren't we? I would say that someone that uses their boat all summer for recreational use might easily do 100 hrs or so. many go it less, some a little more.
Also, since we're on a DIY maintenance site, where we encourage most people to do their own winterization and a LOT of people have their own storage or park it in the back yard, insurance may only be liability insurance, and if it's a 15-20 year old boat to start with, state registration is inexpensive.
I pay $140/year for (liability) insurance, $25/year for hull registration (+ $22 trailer)
My engine oil change costs about $26 (for 8qts of xxx oil) + $6 for a yyy filter + $36 for zzz synthetic drive oil.
A Bravo raw water pump impeller is $20 (maybe once every 2-3 years) outboard raw pumps are not much more or less.....
The above costs will be the same if you have a similar outboard motor if you do the same things (except maybe a little less oil for the same oil changes)
My fuel tank holds 44 gallons.
If I fill the tank only ONCE in the in the summer, (@$5/gallon) it's over $200! how many people only fill their tank once in a summer of use?
Your 'reality check' example is 1000 hours run time for a pleasure boater. Yeah, okay.
10 years at 100 hrs a year sounds reasonable to me.....
Yeah. 1000 hrs for most people over the life of the boat might be very typical (maybe low) .
My "example" boat had the hr meter fail in the mid 80's at 1500+ hours. and that use was from about 1966 to about 1980....... I got the boat in 1997 and used it every year until 2006 when I sold it. All I did to it was replace the raw water pump and coupler (and that because it was probably never lubed).
(I hope you didn't think I meant in 1000 hrs a year

) Back when dad bought the boat, gas was $0.35 per gallon. I would've called that the "tip" of the cost "iceburg" back then...........
My whole point here is that the costs are going to be similar for either an outboard boat or similarly powered I/O boat.
For example, my own current (300 Prop HP Mercruiser 7.4L Bravo III) compares closely to a similar sized boat powered with a 300hp Evinrude ETEC
From:
Evinrude E-TEC 300 H.P. Outboard 2010 Engine Test / Reviews Videos, Specs, Fast Facts, Captain reports | BoatTEST.com
Performance Numbers
We had the E-TEC 300-hp mounted to the stern of a Dusky 233, and while this isn?t a boat report, the combination was impressive. Test weight was just over 4600 lbs. (2086 kgs.), and top speed came in at 5650 rpm and a respectable 51.7 MPH. That gave us a fuel burn of 26.2 gph and 1.97mpg. Dialed back to a more reserved pace, 3500 rpm showed a best cruise of 28.8 MPH, a fuel burn of 9.3 gph, and 3.11 mpg.
I have a fuel flow indicator on my carbureted engine and at 30 mph, I burn 10 gallons per hour (3.0 mpg) with my evil BBC!
(It sounds FAR COOLER THAN some whiny outboard!!)
I think someone else said it earlier, if you have a planing hull at a given weight, it's going to take
APPROX the same amount of fuel per mile to push that thing through the water at a given speed REGARDLESS OF THE ENGINE UNDER THE HOOD OR HANGING OFF THE BACK......... It's just simple physics. (or thermodynamics)
Cheers,
Rick