Yearly Archives: 2015

Casey from Baton Rouge, Louisiana is Powerboat Nation’s first Boater of the Week! Casey first entered the world of powerboating 8 years ago when he bought a 25′ for his 22nd birthday! Great on fuel, with tremendous speed and comfort, it was an easy decision to make it is own. Since then Casey has upgraded to his 31′ Cigarette Bullet, which he takes all over the place, but he calls the Tickfaw River home. He plans to attend the Miami Boat Show, Texas Out Law Challenge, Pirates of Lanier, LOTO Shootout in 2016, and a few others “time permitting.” In the future, Casey has his sights set on upgrading to a 39 Cigarette TS with 700s.

When asked what his favorite boating experience was, he didn’t disappoint…

“Young and dumb. Went to biloxi Mississippi for run of the dogs poker run. Two buddy’s and myself decided to pick up some girls at the signup party. There about 15 minutes and scored 2 girls. They looked young but at least 18. So I asked and they offered up ID’s. All checked out and was good to go in the morning. Get to the boat ramp and there they wait in street clothes thinking I was bluffing. They changed in the cabin once we got going and it was wide open from then on. Was a great day on the water and they stayed at the after party and kept going till it was time Leave. Now fast forward a few weeks we go back and they come also. Only to find out this time we had been given fake ID’s with real pictures and holograms in them! We had been took and could have been under the jail house for this one.”

The team at Powerboat Nation is happy to have a boater like Casey on board and we look forward to seeing where he takes his passion in the future!

 

Powerboat Nation has already reported to you how great the new 32 Sunsation ran during its first sea trials.Β Β  Now the boat is finished, outfitted, and ready to show off in Fort Lauderdale for the upcoming Fort Lauderdale in Water Boat Show.

The combination of Tres Martin of the Performance Boat School providing design and special proprietary step bottom features to the skill and craftsmanship of the Schaldenbrand Brothers really came through on this build.

Joe and Wayne said they could not be happier with the outcome and the boat is running 75 MPH with twin 350 outboards fully outfitted.

This new 32CCX from Sunsation is sure to bring many new boaters to the water and like we told you before they have already sold 7 of these great looking and running boats.

We cant wait to take this new CC hotrod for a run off Miami!

Related Story

By now all of the true loyal fans of “GONE AGAIN SKATER” know a newer 368 SKATER is on its way to replace the fantastically fast 32 SKATER Gone Again.

Since the loyal fan base is the biggest driver and motivation of Owner Kenny Mungle and Driver Micheal Lee Lockwood, it’s only natural they would offer the final word to name the new 368 to the fans

Until November 12 open voting right HERE for fans to help name the new 368 Skater!Β  Kenny and Michael have been going back and forth about the new boats name and bouncingΒ  “GONE, “GONE AGAIN” and “GONE AGAIN 2.0”.Β  but they just can decide and are now asking YOU to help. Β  You can submit your vote online, or submit a new name if you have an idea you think will be that much better than those listed.

The new name will be announced the night of 12 November during the World’s Fastest 32′ Skater Street Party and Happy Hour,Β  4-7pm at Rumor LoungeΒ  in Key West, Fla while we are all there for the Florida Powerboat Clubs Key West Poker Run. Hosted by HammerDown Boating.

This is YOUR chance to take part in the name the race boat…

11892190_1072849162726777_5018977448654869585_n

At one point or another if you’re a boat owner with an electrically operated engine hatch you will end up replacing the hatch actuator, also known as a hatch ram. It seems these products, like many, just have a service life that will make changing a unit one of the passages of boat ownership.

Because the hatch actuators open and close to different lengths it has been a mystery really how to measure your original unit correctly. While maybe not truly difficult it has always been a confusing proposition to figure out. So we put our lead tech adviser and trusty assistant on the subject to see if we just couldn’t simplify this commonly needed task. At PBN were committed to making owning and serving a boat easier so that you enjoy your time on the water where you belong.

Ron Pascucci, originally from Long Island, New York is used to rough conditions when boating. While he now resides on The St. Lawrence River near Lake Erie, save the salt, the conditions on the lake are really not much different from Long Island where the the water can be rough with whitecaps from time to time. Ron is the proud owner of a 308 Skater powered by twin 300XS outboards and was once featured in Powerboat Magazine back in 2006.

After a rebuild and new lowers, the boat’s stability and speed left a lot of room for improvement. There’s nothing like some engine work and new props to make a boat go from β€œJust another powerboat” to β€œHow did you run that fast?”. Chris Overkamp of Bow and Stern Marine was no stranger to this, as he picked up 13 MPH in his 2000 Spectre 30 after making drive adjustments and adding new props from BBlades. (Link to other story)

So when Ron came to Chris to bring his boat from 90 MPH to 100 MPH and keep it nice and stable, Chris knew just what to do. First things first was to tune up the drives, height and toe adjustment were made. The ECM’s were also sent out to Dave Bush racing to be tuned. These efforts brought the Skater up to 98 MPH, but just couldn’t break the 100 MPH mark, and still the stability and handling was still not quite up to Ron’s desire:

“I love the boat with the older 300’s but with the newer ones I couldn’t get anywhere near a hundred. So he (Chris) worked on the trim, he worked on placement, he toyed with the engines a bit and each little thing he did he’d get a mile-an-hour but we could not get anywhere near breaking a hundred”

Chris knew his next call: Brett at BBlades Propellers. Brett’s help on Chris’s own Spectre got him just what he needed and now for Ron’s Skater, BBlades Props was sure to be the final touch perfecting this project. Chris went about working with Brett to find the right match for the boat. Selecting the right prop would make the difference between success and failure.

“We had a bunch of props re-worked and everything, but the Blasters that he (BBlades) has, cause they’re a such a sternlift prop, we were able to really get the motors up high. Cause it’s a 4-Blade for one, and two, also gets them back out of the water so you can turn it up a little more.”

In the latest test at the time of writing this, the boat pulled an 104 MPH top run and was handling quite smoothly. In Ron’s own words:

“These props need to hold me level on the water. They gave me a stern lift so I was able to have a better attitude running through the waves. That’s what I noticed right away, handling. The range was nice, the attitude of the boat was just beautiful and throttle response and mid-range was there with the 4 blades. So I got out of the river and into a lake and I couldn’t believe it. They did a great job.”

When asked his thoughts on the project Brett at BBlades said:

β€œI felt very strongly that the Blaster props would allow us to use the engine height settings at a height to take the boat to the next level.”

The work’s not done yet however, as Chris intends to keep working with Brett to fine tune the props to further increase speed and handling. We’re sure they got the knowledge and ability to push this 308 Skater to the absolute highest level.

In 1969, the Miami International Boat Show moved from its historic digs at Dinner Key, to the brand new Miami Beach Convention Center. Most of the boatbuilder exhibitors were chapped by the fact the demonstration facilities at Dinner Key were sumptuous, and the ones at the Convention Center were nonexistent. I had just finished my new Nova 24, and had shown it at the New York Boat Show in January, and had invited lots of folks down for a demo ride. The Nova 24 was way different than all the other performance runabouts her size. In New York, we had shown the boat on a special cradle which tilted the boat on its side, and allow β€˜lookers’ to see that we had a twin inboard engine v-drive boat with lots of innovations (for the day). All the other boats in that market had sterndrives or outboards. I had always considered the aluminum sterndrive an instrument of the devil (still do), and set about making a very nice inboard boat. The booth was staffed by my French dealer, Jean Claude Simon, and local dealers Skip Allen and Pete Quackenbush. We had an ace in the hole. I had surveyed the area, and discovered that there was place to tie up on the Dade canal, right next to the show. Two palm trees arced out over the water, right next to the Meridien Avenue bridge. The Holocaust Monument is there now. My boat just fit under the bridge at high tide, and we could run demonstrations at will.

Image-(124)

When the show opened, one of the first customers into the booth was an elderly gentleman who identified himself as Mr. Gottwald, Chairman of the Ethyl Corporation. He asked for me, and said that he had been referred by Ed Cantor (the bridge champion, not the comedian) to buy a Nova 24. He asked if he could get a quick ride, and I was pleased to tell him that we had the only demo at the show. It was powered by 351 Holman Moodys, and Crusader Vee drives. I instructed Pete to take him for a spin.

Image-(121)

They proceeded across the parking lot to my β€œsecret” dock and boarded the boat. After showing Mr. Gottwald around the boat, Pete fired it up and proceeded along the Miami Beach shoreline to Government Cut. In February, it is seldom smooth at the mouth of the cut, but that day, it inundated by big swells from the north. You couldn’t find a better day to demonstrate the Nova 24. Gradually picking up speed, they were cruising about 40 MPH, heading east toward the Atlantic, and the big swells. Pete advised Mr. Gottwald to sit down in the bucket seat, and to hold on lightly to grab bar in front of him. The swells got increasingly higher, but the Nova was at her best in these conditions. They were climbing the backsides of the waves, and contouring down the other side with just the props in the water, and rest of the boat clear. A smooth landing each time, and back into the air. Mr. Gottwald finally lost his confidence, and when they reached top of a particularly lofty roller, he partially stood, while still holding on the seat, and lifted the seat off the pedestal with the boat at about 45 degrees. When they reached the base of the swell, gravity caused Mr. Gottwald’s legs to buckle a little, and he sat back down, but the pedestal was unhooked from the chair, and the bottom of the chair hit the pedestal forward of the post. This caused the chair to rotate 90 degrees aft, and the chair, still in the death grip of its passenger, landed behind the post, and as the boat climbed another swell, chair and passenger zoomed aft, stopped only by Mr. Gottwald’s head sticking between the engine box and the side of the boat. Picture this: they are climbing another swell, and the rider is lodged, on his back, with his head holding him in place. Pete sees the situation and immediately yanks the throttles to zero, and here comes Mr. Gottwald and his chair at a relative speed of 35 or 40, still on his back, head aft, feet forward, aiming for the now empty pedestal. The bottom of the chair hit it dead center, clipped it off like a matchstick, but the force caused the chair and passenger to rotate forward 180 degrees. Now headfirst, he rocketed through the teak doors, all the way to the rope locker, where he stuck his head through the vinyl cover, still with a death grip on the seat. Pete called to him β€œMy God, Mr. Gottwald, are you all right?” β€œYes”. β€œLet me help you out of there”. β€œI’m OK. If you will stop trying to kill me, I will buy the boat”. Which he did.

Image-(122)