V1925 or V2025 and Jackplate
V1925 or V2025 and Jackplate
Hello - Got my first question for you all. Has anyone heard or had experience with a 1925 or 2025 and a Jackplate? My goal is to be able get into the shallows on the CT river for fishing and tasty winged creatures, while still being able to venture out to Plumb Gut or the Race on good days. Thanks in advance for the help.
Scott
Scott
The River is quite deep in some parts. However I'm trying to get in to all of the back marsh area. There's a bit of shallow water around the mouth and coves along the river, pot holes here and there. I'd be casting top water stuff, flyfishing, and this is where the ducks and geese are.
I beleive FishOff's rigs is what I would be looking at.
Thanks
Scott
I beleive FishOff's rigs is what I would be looking at.
Thanks
Scott
- Jay Perrotta
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Scott we've done a couple of 23 footers with jackplates but no 19's or 20's.
When we did the first one - (a competitive cat fisherman in WV) - I felt like we were selling bass boats. Thought I should do some purple glitter and a batman windshield!
but...
I loved the darn thing! We did a second one recently and enjoyed it as well.
There's nothing about the 19 and 20 that would preclude using one!
Skinny water alloy - I like it!
When we did the first one - (a competitive cat fisherman in WV) - I felt like we were selling bass boats. Thought I should do some purple glitter and a batman windshield!
but...
I loved the darn thing! We did a second one recently and enjoyed it as well.
There's nothing about the 19 and 20 that would preclude using one!
Skinny water alloy - I like it!
Jay Perrotta
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Hunter,
I've got my next BLM already planned in my head...and it's a 19 footer that will included power tiller steering, and a jack plate, a Trolling moter mounted on the bow, and a pedestal seat, for the ultimate REAL Florida Flats/bay boat. (If they'll make me a tiller version) that doesn't have powder coat, glitter, platforms, towers, or shiney gel coat to rip up on oysterbeds!
I already chug along over 2-1/2 feet of water in my 26 footer to get to some skinny water Redfish....it's daring but many times worth it.
I'd love to see some multi-tasking 19's.
I've got my next BLM already planned in my head...and it's a 19 footer that will included power tiller steering, and a jack plate, a Trolling moter mounted on the bow, and a pedestal seat, for the ultimate REAL Florida Flats/bay boat. (If they'll make me a tiller version) that doesn't have powder coat, glitter, platforms, towers, or shiney gel coat to rip up on oysterbeds!
I already chug along over 2-1/2 feet of water in my 26 footer to get to some skinny water Redfish....it's daring but many times worth it.
I'd love to see some multi-tasking 19's.
I think I'm in love. Check out this site.
www.duckwaterboats.com To bad the bottom hull in only 0.19 and 5052.
Scott
www.duckwaterboats.com To bad the bottom hull in only 0.19 and 5052.
Scott
- JETTYWOLF
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Hmmm???
Cool idea's...never seen that site before. (Chaps, do we need to add that site to the list??)
but I prefer this one. I'm biased! I own a 26' one.
I've always loved THIS boat that could go offshore one day, up in the skinny for Redfish on the trolling motor the next day, and then a few ducks the next trip....if I was a duckman.
Hunter, wonder how shallow them duck boats can go?
Re-sale could be harder that a standard CC boat
Cool idea's...never seen that site before. (Chaps, do we need to add that site to the list??)
but I prefer this one. I'm biased! I own a 26' one.
I've always loved THIS boat that could go offshore one day, up in the skinny for Redfish on the trolling motor the next day, and then a few ducks the next trip....if I was a duckman.
Hunter, wonder how shallow them duck boats can go?
Re-sale could be harder that a standard CC boat
How shallow can these Pacific/BLM boats go? The rated draft on the 23' is 12" and I've always been curious how little they can run in. I've been putting together ideas for a 23ST for a while now and definately think I'd get a jackplate, as we have a lot of good rivers around here.
The current boat can float in 6" (engine up) and run in 10" which gets me pretty well everywhere but I still run onto some pretty nasty gravel bars now and then (water is mud colored so no hope of spotting them ahead of time).
Not thread related, but I'm also curious if anyone knows the distance from tip of the bow to the water on a 23 or 26 - biggest standard trolling motor is 60" long and I've been trying to figure out if I can get one up on the front.
The current boat can float in 6" (engine up) and run in 10" which gets me pretty well everywhere but I still run onto some pretty nasty gravel bars now and then (water is mud colored so no hope of spotting them ahead of time).
Not thread related, but I'm also curious if anyone knows the distance from tip of the bow to the water on a 23 or 26 - biggest standard trolling motor is 60" long and I've been trying to figure out if I can get one up on the front.
Do you need to be moving fairly fast to have decent steering control with the trim tab type? I don't need a trolling motor for holding position in a current or actual trolling, more for maneuvering around a lot at very slow speeds, think largemouth bass in small lakes.welder wrote:Fishbuld , you can get trim tabs with trolling motors on them , they work great.
Another idea I had was to get the kicker bracket option and mount a digital-steer remote motor (Motorguide has one for transom mount now) to the bracket. Then the column could be very short, but it would still lose a lot of the steering leverage that the front-mount has.
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My 2325CC with 3/4 tank of gas , Honda BF225, trailer [ galv ] , spair tire and guide on rails, all gear that stays on the boat.
5860 lbs, on our USDA cert. Peanut scales
Now top off the fuel and add all the fishing gear and ice and stuff I would be knocking on 7000 lbs
The trailer weighs right a 1795 lbs [ With tire and bracket + 8' guide ons ]
5860 lbs, on our USDA cert. Peanut scales
Now top off the fuel and add all the fishing gear and ice and stuff I would be knocking on 7000 lbs
The trailer weighs right a 1795 lbs [ With tire and bracket + 8' guide ons ]
Lester,
PacificV2325, Honda BF225
2386
PacificV2325, Honda BF225
2386
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Running skinny with Alloy
Sorry I missed this discussion. What you need is a Black Spot Boat. Just pull it behind your big boat on those rough days! Running in less than an 1" of water is all kinds of fun!
Merrill S. Johnson
WWW.BlackSpotBoats.com
New England Distributor for Rolls Axle Trailers
WWW.Rollsaxle.com
WWW.BlackSpotBoats.com
New England Distributor for Rolls Axle Trailers
WWW.Rollsaxle.com
- JETTYWOLF
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Fishbulb,
The trolling tabs are crap if you are in East Coast current.......Many friends have tried them around here, and you'll be driven crazy in a river current just steering them things.
I can see open bays, lite current, they probably work great. Tight places, like our inlet's jetties here in Jax. They don't work. And in the river here.
They all ditched them and went back to 36V trolling motors.
If you use a Motor Guide with a SS shaft, I have heard of custom's. A lil longer than 60". Don't know how did it, but heard someone did.
All that might work on a 19 or 20' Model, but the 23 & 26 are a bit large.
WHATS A 4.3 Liter??? A V-6???
If so you can tow a 20 footer, I did my large NON ALLOY boat 23 foot boat with a Ford 302 and a 5 speed stick. It sucked, but it worked.
The trolling tabs are crap if you are in East Coast current.......Many friends have tried them around here, and you'll be driven crazy in a river current just steering them things.
I can see open bays, lite current, they probably work great. Tight places, like our inlet's jetties here in Jax. They don't work. And in the river here.
They all ditched them and went back to 36V trolling motors.
If you use a Motor Guide with a SS shaft, I have heard of custom's. A lil longer than 60". Don't know how did it, but heard someone did.
All that might work on a 19 or 20' Model, but the 23 & 26 are a bit large.
WHATS A 4.3 Liter??? A V-6???
If so you can tow a 20 footer, I did my large NON ALLOY boat 23 foot boat with a Ford 302 and a 5 speed stick. It sucked, but it worked.
Re: V1925 or V2025 and Jackplate
I've taken my 19' skiff up some very shallow rivers on the flood to blast ducks. It doesn't take much water to float it at all and when I get to the super shallow water, I use a pole to move the boat. I don't have a jackplate.Hunter wrote:Hello - Got my first question for you all. Has anyone heard or had experience with a 1925 or 2025 and a Jackplate? My goal is to be able get into the shallows on the CT river for fishing and tasty winged creatures, while still being able to venture out to Plumb Gut or the Race on good days. Thanks in advance for the help.
Scott
Re: V1925 or V2025 and Jackplate
[/quote]
I've taken my 19' skiff up some very shallow rivers on the flood to blast ducks. It doesn't take much water to float it at all and when I get to the super shallow water, I use a pole to move the boat. I don't have a jackplate.[/quote]
Sweet, never thought about poling. Your other post said that you ran a 90hp motor and it works out real well. Would do anything different if you got another skiff?
I've taken my 19' skiff up some very shallow rivers on the flood to blast ducks. It doesn't take much water to float it at all and when I get to the super shallow water, I use a pole to move the boat. I don't have a jackplate.[/quote]
Sweet, never thought about poling. Your other post said that you ran a 90hp motor and it works out real well. Would do anything different if you got another skiff?