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How are the 27 and 29 stepped hulls in rough water? >

How are the 27 and 29 stepped hulls in rough water?

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How are the 27 and 29 stepped hulls in rough water?

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Old 07-10-2009, 06:47 AM
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How was the 29 twin compared to the 29 single?
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Old 07-10-2009, 08:06 PM
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All of the singles were 29 Fevers. The twin was a 2002 Formula 292 ... twin 6.2 MX's ... a complete pig, and slow. Topped out at ~ 70 mph. That was my least favorite of any I owned, although it did have 13 cupholders From what I know, there isn't much difference between the ride/speed of the 292 and the 29Fever, with twin 6.2s. 502's is a different story. Friend had a 29 Fever with 502 MPI's and it accelerated hard. Heavy in the rear, but it ran great, mid-upper 80's if I remember right. Everything on/in the 6.2 is made of plastic, too. Not built anything like the blue engines.

Last edited by bob_t; 07-10-2009 at 08:19 PM.
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Old 07-11-2009, 06:52 AM
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Originally Posted by Racerngr1
I have a 29 and I really like it. It's hard to answer that question for me because I've never been in the great lakes, so I don't know what choppy water is in your mind. It does really well in the water at Havasu and does ok in the Ocean depending on conditions.
well pretty much if its anything bigger than 1' i'm running tabs down, drive tucked if my wife and son are in the boat. Its a fun boat if its just me and the guys in 2' 3's, bring the drive up a little, run some tab so she stays flat and hammer down. But my son is only 17 months old and trying to find a speed slow enough to be safe and fast enough to let the tabs work is impossible. it does pretty well at 60 to 70 running tabs with the drive 0'd but obviously thats way to fast for a young child in a 22' boat. I already knew i wasn't going to get the ride of a 38 cig out of a 27/29' boat.
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Old 07-11-2009, 06:57 AM
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Originally Posted by bob_t
Friend had a 29 Fever with 502 MPI's and it accelerated hard. Heavy in the rear, but it ran great, mid-upper 80's if I remember right.
Same problem i have, i'm thinking if i had a small block it might not be so hard to keep the bow down. But probably not enough of a difference to get what I'm looking for.
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Old 07-11-2009, 08:34 AM
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I got on for sale...
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Old 07-11-2009, 09:03 AM
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27 does real good on lakes. sharp v cutting the wakes.. but the pacific ocean is not what it is made for in my humble opinion
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Old 07-11-2009, 10:10 AM
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Originally Posted by JayFan
I got on for sale...
details? link?
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Old 07-11-2009, 11:02 AM
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The Formula had lots of nice creature features, and the layout is really nice. It was really slow to plane, with a lot of bow rise, but if you "flip" the locations of the spacers in the trim rams at the drives, you can tuck the drives under a little more and that helped. If you are used to all of the gauges on a fountain, most are not on the 292 ... just the basic necessities. Also, one thing that I found unacceptable was that, with the electric trim indicators, you don't know where the drives are without the key in the "on" position. Mechanical indicators would have been really nice. There were no tab indicators for the bennett tabs, either. For me, the seats were too high and the windshield too low, and I personally couldn't tolerate the amount of wind in my face, or the wind noise. If you could combine several items of Reggie's boats with those of the Porter's, I think you could arrive at the perfect trailer boat. I really think the 29' boats (Fountain is my personal choice) are the best all around performance trailer boats. We found that trailering the 35 everywhere we went to go boating, usually 30+ miles each way everytime we went boating, got tiring, very quickly, especially on 2 lane country roads. Towing it on the interstates was not a problem, but not much lake access directly off the interstate!

Last edited by bob_t; 07-11-2009 at 11:08 AM.
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Old 07-11-2009, 06:08 PM
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I have a 29 we do well in rough water, or maybe its just the driver.
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Old 07-11-2009, 10:09 PM
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Really? I would expect the hustler to ride better than the fountain, but you think the 26 velocity road better?

It was actually a 1993 26' Thoroughbred, but without a doubt it rode much better than the 1998 single step, single engine 29' Fountain.
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