"2001" vs earlier hull |
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tentantoes
Newbie Joined: July-01-2008 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Posted: July-01-2008 at 11:12pm |
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Hi all, new here with a question about hull differences. Today I came across a 1980 SN locally, a bit of a project, but at a very good price. So I ran home and started researching and was wanting to know what the differences were in the wake created by the later "2001" vs this '80.
From what I've read, the 2001 can be a great wakeboard boat, but what about the '80? I figure the flat bottom of the '80 would lay a nice flat slalom wake, but what about the 2001 at those speeds? Thanks for any input, and hopefully I'll be reporting back soon to show you my project! |
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Brktracer
Senior Member Joined: December-20-2007 Location: South Carolina Status: Offline Points: 387 |
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The '80 will have a very, I repeat..VERY, nice wake at boarding speeds.
My frined has a new Malibu boarding boat. They usually ride with the tanks full. I towed his son with my boat and he said he loved my boat's wake! I do a lot of kneeboarding and absolutely love the wake from this '76. The shape of the wake is perfect. Put a couple extra people in the boat and it's real nice! Matt |
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bkhallpass
Grand Poobah Joined: March-29-2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4723 |
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Waterski wake could be considered better on the 80. The 2001s (82-89) are good ski boats, but have a reputation for a hard lip when slaloming. A friend of mine who competed in 3 Event skiing for 30 years still calls the 2001 the best all around boat ever made.
As a wakeboard boat, the 80 will be a narrower wake because the boat is narrower (and shorter btw). The 80 is not a heavy boat and so it does not require a great deal of ballast to sink it. The 2001 is generally considered the best wakeboard boat of the closed bow, pre-wakeboard era. My $.02. BKH |
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Livin' the Dream
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horkn
Platinum Member Joined: September-10-2007 Location: Cedarburg, Wi Status: Offline Points: 1511 |
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While the 2001 is a very nice boarding boat, some of the more obscure boats that are not quite as well known make an even better wake. The wake of my 78 martinique is even better for boarding than a 2001. But try and find a martinique compared to a 2001. A friend of mine that is the son of a nautique dealer has told me he never thought that he could ever find an older cheaper nautique with a better wakeboarding wake than a 2001 until he rode behind my martinique the first time. No doubt though, a 2001 makes a very nice wake. |
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78 martinique- refloored, reinforced, stringers re glassed, re engineered interior
GT40P heads Edelbrock Performer intake acme 4 blade http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v64/horkn/fish/nautique.jpg |
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tentantoes
Newbie Joined: July-01-2008 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Wow, this forum moves pretty quick! Thanks for all the insight, I think you told me pretty much what I needed to hear. I want a good all around boat, and this sounds like it does several things well. I mainly wanted to see if there was a big reason why I should pass on this one and find a 2001, but it sounds like I'll be very happy with the '80. Thanks a lot for your help!
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behindpropeller
Platinum Member Joined: July-31-2006 Status: Offline Points: 1810 |
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Also...the 80 will have a steeper wake....fyi.
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TRBenj
Grand Poobah Joined: June-29-2005 Location: NWCT Status: Offline Points: 21186 |
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FYI, I believe the Martiniques of the 70's used the same hull as the Ski Nautique of the same era. The only difference would be the deck and interior. Im not a wakeboarder, but BHP made a valid point- the pre-2001 wake will be narrower and steeper than the newer boats. If Im not mistaken, the 2001 is already considered to have a pretty steep wake. Not sure if steeper is always better- but its something to consider before purchasing. |
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horkn
Platinum Member Joined: September-10-2007 Location: Cedarburg, Wi Status: Offline Points: 1511 |
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If you looked at the hull of a 78 martinique ( and I am not sure of what other years were exactly the same as the 78 martinique) it is quite a bit different than the hull of a 78 ski nautique. It has much more of a V to it than the SN hull of that age. Honestly even before I added more weight to it with the interior redo, it still made too much of a wake to be a perfect skiing boat. Now for boarding it is perfect. |
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78 martinique- refloored, reinforced, stringers re glassed, re engineered interior
GT40P heads Edelbrock Performer intake acme 4 blade http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v64/horkn/fish/nautique.jpg |
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Chopper
Gold Member Joined: June-15-2006 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 821 |
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I have a 1989 "2001" and my buddy has a 1980 Ski.
The 2001 is a much bigger boat than the pre 2001 comparitively speaking. Here's my 2c worth of advice from a wake boarding perspective. Both hull types are relatively flat in design, so wake shape is similar. 1980: With minimal ballast (500lb max), the 1980 will throw a respectable wake, however it will be very solid and vertical with minimal transition. However as BKH mentioned, the wake will be nawwor as the boat has a narrow beam. If you like big vertical "knee blowing" type wake, this is the boat you want. the pre 2001 hull will throuw a nice boarding wake without ballast. 2001 hull: I run generaly between 400 & 500lb in my 1989 with a combo of lead / steel weights. I beleive the spray releifs along the rear half of the hull round out the wake slightly compared to the 1980. It is not as vertical, and has a nicer ramp comparred to the 80, but I would still consider it steep with this amount of ballast, comparred to say a Malibu sportster / response. Wake wider than the 1980, but still narrow when comparred to the larger nautiques, but I ride a 70-75 ft line. Wake is fine at 80-85ft if you want wider. With both hulls, the more weight you add, the larger the wake becomes, to the point where I consider it to be unridable. We decided to put in an extra 2 x 500lb sacs in the 89 to see what it was like. Wake was that big that we dumped it out again after the first run. I know some of the guys run 1800+lb of ballast. I cannot see the need for anything like this. I honestly could not see either one of these CC's being particularly good for slalom due to the sheer size of table top. |
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8122pbrainard
Grand Poobah Joined: September-14-2006 Location: Three Lakes Wi. Status: Offline Points: 41045 |
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Tom, I think you are referring to the later Martinique hulls and not the 70's hulls. Tim is correct that the Nautique and the Martinique shared the same hull but just had different decks. If you go into the Ref. section and pull up the 1978 specs, you will find the the two boats have identical lengths, beams and drafts. If the Martinique was a deeper V as you have stated, the draft would be more than the Nautique. You're from Cedarburg, but you state the boat is up north. Where? |
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nates78ski
Platinum Member Joined: January-24-2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1041 |
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I'll vouch for my '78, The first summer we had it, before the resto. We had it loaded down with ballast & it was absolutely ridiculous. But, since then I really haven't wanted to put all that crap in my nice boat & with just a driver & a couple people the wake is most definitely adequate for basic-intermediate wakeboarding (Backrolls, 180, 360, etc.) Wake is very steep(which I love) and very narrow, which can also be nice, b/c when you're teaching someone to ride, it makes 'em feel good when they can jump wake to wake after just a few runs w/o cutting too hard.
Nate |
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tentantoes
Newbie Joined: July-01-2008 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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This was very helpful, thanks! That's the extent of what I'd like to be able to do on this boat as far as riding is concerned. This is really sounding like the type of boat I've been dreaming up, one that can do several things fairly well at a good price, and also has an oldschool feel to it. I'm going to call the owner back today with an offer! |
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horkn
Platinum Member Joined: September-10-2007 Location: Cedarburg, Wi Status: Offline Points: 1511 |
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I dunno. Maybe it does have the same hull as a 78 SN? I can say that it makes a steep wake, and was never ideal for waterskiing. I keep my boat in Tomahawk, not far from Tree Lakes;) I just wish I could get it all figured out. I forgot a timing light and that hampered my engine buildup, well at least the tune up part of that. I got the heads, intake, and all that on, but timing without a timing light is near futile. |
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78 martinique- refloored, reinforced, stringers re glassed, re engineered interior
GT40P heads Edelbrock Performer intake acme 4 blade http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v64/horkn/fish/nautique.jpg |
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Nautique2001
Grand Poobah Joined: June-14-2004 Location: Massachusetts Status: Offline Points: 2832 |
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Hi Michael,
I owned a 1980 Nautique for 8 years. I loved wakeboarding off it. The wake was perfect between 18-22 MPH without adding weight. Great boat! The slalom wake was challenging. It kicks up a nasty rooster tail, even at 30 MPH. I didn't do well at slalom then, so I guess it didn't matter! I own the 2001 hull now. Excellent wakeboarding wake, much better slalom wake than the '80. I enjoyed my '80 and love my '86. You can't go wrong with either, my friend! Good luck to you. Don't worry, any decision you make will be the "Correct" one! Ken |
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tentantoes
Newbie Joined: July-01-2008 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Thanks for the input, I really appreciate it. Here's a bit of an update as to where I'm at with this. The owner of the shop where the boat is parked called me out of the blue last week. He said his secretary told him I called so he pulled my number off the caller ID. He was a super nice guy and just wanted to offer his opinion of the boat since he's done some work on it, and I was grateful to get it. It's not his boat, it actually belongs to an older gentleman in AL, he just let the guy park it out front to try to sell it. He describes it as being even more of a project than I anticipated and named several serious things that need attention. The only way I'll end up with the boat is if he takes an absolute low-ball offer, which he might considering the boat has been sitting out there for over a year with little interest shown.
After talking a while he started telling me about some of the ski boats he had there at his shop (Florida Inboards in Panama City FL). He said he took trades and I told him the only thing I had that he might be interested in is my dad's '75 Sleekcraft with an Olds 455. The guy jumped through the phone with excitement, and when I told him it was converted from a jet to v-drive he got even more excited. The boat needs a lot of work but he said he was more than interested in checking it out and that he had a '92 Ski Nautique in decent shape that he could trade with me. So I'm trying to get my dad's boat this month to carry to him for a look. So now my question is, what about the characteristics of a '92 SN as compared with the other two I have asked about? |
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Old Ripper
Newbie Joined: July-08-2008 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 16 |
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If it were my $$$ I would go with the '92. 1990-96 was the first major hull change in Correct Craft's history. Much improved slalom wake/softer ride. If you wake board more often you could always add a tower and load up the boat with friends/weight and this would give a nice "rampy" wake (think jump ramp). The '92 has a wider beam and is a bit longer 19'6. Single exhaust with muffler for those dawn patrol runs. Breakerless ignition. Option of 1.23:1 transmisson. I belive HP options up to 285. Lift up observers seat provides lots of storage.
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99/90/80 Ski Nautique
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