1970 Chieftain V
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2007
- Messages
- 159
Does this look like it is riding stern heavy? I have seen some other starcraft pics and it looks as though mine might be riding low in the stern?

Yes it does look just a lil low ( couple inches )possibly 3 to 4 ?
my Islander and many others seem to sit just down to the ribs at the rear !
What motor and what all is mounted in the very rear section ?
But she sure looks Sweeet !
fish
Jason she doesnt look bad to me ( actualy your boat looks great ) . I think the I/O Starcrafts are a little stern heavy naturally . Have a look at others here in the show us your starcraft thread and I think you will agree yours looks fine.
Rick
My Jupiter sat the same way
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Mine sits about like that, I put as much fishing gear and weight as far forward as possible. I have my 6 gal kicker fuel tank infront of the passanger seat, one of my two batteries about 6 feet forward. But I have a 25hp kicker on the back. When I travel I try to sit one person in the cabine, one in the driver seat and one in the passenger. Then it planes ok at about 20 mph and the bow never seems to really rise.
Mine is a 1986 cheiftain, 21foot, with 140hp chevy, merc. outdrive
wow...what a great looking boat.
Love that paint scheme too!
I like the blue and white paint job. Thumbs up.
I run in salt water almost 100% of the time. I have a fresh water cooling kit on my 140 that has antifreeze in the engine block, but I still run salt water through the manifold and riser. A fully closed kit was not available for the 140 and I did not try and make one that would also put antifreeze through the manifold. I think I payed $300 ish for a new manifold since mine was cracked when I bought the boat. My grandpa years ago ran a 120 in salt for years ( may through sept. and he never replaced a manifold and it sat in salt all summer so I figured the antifreeze in the engine block was good enough. My fuel tanks twin 18gallons are placed under the driver and passenger seats. Batteries are kind of hard to move too far forward because of long battery cables so I have one that sits under the passenger seat and one in the back corner opposite the kicker motor (cant see in the picture). This allows the boat to sit level (side to side) full of fuel with no one onboard. I kind of wish I had 1 fuel tank (45 gallons) in the belly of the boat moved as far forward as possible. Not worth tearing the boat apart to make that change. Mine planes good at 20, but with a passenger in the cabine it never really plows water. Most of the time in the ocean you either have nice weather and can run 20mph or you are stuck at 10mphish. I do try and store all my lead fishing weights/downrigger balls up front. Fish box sits upfront.
AHHH those are my Favorites in the STARCRAFT WORLD I love the Chieftain....
ONE DAY I WILL HAVE ONE 25 to 30'
wait I almost did but it was sold
One thing I really like is the door that swings in because I leave the door open while fishing and the door would be in the way if it swung out. Also I like the shelf opposite the door to store stuff.
In the future when the canvas top is bad I am considering putting a hard top on it. I think my top will last several more years since I store the boat inside.
The only thing I would like to change would be a gas tank in the belly and make fish box to go where the fuel tanks are now, that would free up room in the cabin. I will not be making that change too much work and $$. I can't downsize to a smaller fish box because I have had that one clear full a few times.
Enjoy your ss and safe boating.
I would make sure a keep access to the fuel tank hoses and fuel sender reasonable, I built removable access plates. Came in handy when my fuel sender went bad this year.