Tagit wrote:A few thoughts - Boat on trailer is definitely less work than a boat on a mooring, but can your wife and yourself easily handle a 8.5m boat at the ramp, and do you have storage space at home? On a mooring you hop in the dinghy and off you go. Benefits both ways, but the hassles of launching a large trailer boat may become an impediment to using it if all the stars don't align for a husband & wife team. Antifouling a boat that size is a simple DIY project. Can be done every 2nd year with a short lift, water blast and leg service (oil, anodes, check) on the intermediate year. Take two of you less than a day to antifoul and ~$400 - $500 + anodes. Every 2nd year whilst doing the antifoul is the time to look at doing the rubber leg boots. Other than that a stern leg is pretty similar to an outboard gear box with seals etc to check. Sternleg will cost more than an outboard leg to maintain, but gives you the option is diesel power. Safer, cheaper, better range, better torque etc, and also can be easy to self service compared to a late model outboard. In the big picture I don't think there is a huge cost difference either way. Biggest thing with a sternleg is to keep up with the maintenance each year and not just let it sit for years without being checked. Value for money wise you can get into a nice moored boat for way less than a big trailer boat. The moored boat can also be more heavily built and deliver a better ride from this. You can easily be talking sub$100k vs $200k+ for boats that deliver the same things. On the other hand, if you can manage a large trailer boat OK, it opens up trips to more remote locations by road. I just put some pictures of a 9.7m launch we are working on up in the Winter Boat Projects thread and that is a sub $100k boat. Put that on a trailer and it would be closer to $200k. If you lived close enough to the ramp you could even look at buying a 'launching trailer' to pull the moored boat out on during the winter. Spend $10k on a simple trailer and get the easy maintenance with the convenience of a moored boat.. Big trailer boats are a very nice thing, but they come with some costs in both money and ease of use that you need to consider in the trade-off with a moored boat. |

Andee wrote:Some more thoughts Pompey. We went the trailer boat way….. As with everything there are pros and cons, and so it becomes a personal decision. It's an 8m Dickey boat on an alloy trailer. 300hp Suzuki outboard motor. We don't intend to do any trolling / game fishing, so that helped with the motor conundrum. In terms of motor longevity, well we'll see at some point won't we. ( 60 hours so far ) We had a 100 series Landcruiser to tow with, so that again helped. Fuel wise: At 22 knots, it's using around 32 litres per hour. Ouch! More often than not, it's just my wife and I putting the boat on & off the trailer. ( I do the trailer and she puts the boat on & off ) It all becomes easier when we have an extra air of hands available though. Good ramps become important, and to be honest we have had the odd stressful moment! So far we have done some fishing / boating in Napier, Taupo, Bay Of Islands and now the Coromandel. It's that mobility which we enjoy. Finding storage has been tricky. Indoor at Opua and now Coromandel, costing around $3000 per year. If you lower the motor, the boat fits in a 10m deep shed. A 3.4m high doorway is another thing to be mindful of. Good luck with your decision. There is lots of wonderful advice available on this forum. Like many, I've been very guilty of reading it all and never adding to the discussion. ![]() |
MandM wrote:My 2 cents worth.Depends where you live and what facilities you have access too. Also do you want to fish a lot of different places around NZ, or are you happy cruising around up north from your marina? If you have a good marina and lift out facilities etc personally Id get a larger moored boat for the extra size, comfort etc and can accommodate more people. Plenty of great places to go cruising out of Auckland, northland etc fishing diving for the weekends and holidays. I am having the same dilemma now but I decided to get a new 8.5 mtr trailer boat soon due to not having any good facilities in New Plymouth. We have no access to fuel, no lift out facility here and the marina is crap. Not many great second hand alloy boats around, the ones that are, are still $180k and they are 8/10 years old. Selling them for what it cost them to build back in 2006 etc. Crazy. New cost for a 8.5 mtr wide beam boat is banging on the door of 270/300k depending on specs. Can buy a great second hand moored 10/13 mtr vessel for that money. Plenty on trade me atm, buyers market it seems. Good luck with your decision. |
^^^
MikeAqua wrote:Beam would be a big consideration for me too. Once you get up over ~7m, making a boat fit within standard trailer width, rather than optimal shape starts to limit beam. That has a big effect on handling, stability and internal room. |
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