Looking for my old Champion and bringing back memories of it brought up a question. Now that Mr.Power is working with Charger is a dry lay hull a option like Champion did?
Looking for my old Champion and bringing back memories of it brought up a question. Now that Mr.Power is working with Charger is a dry lay hull a option like Champion did?
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Only a phone call away for the answer. Or call Ulrich Marine and talk to Kelly.
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WTF is a dry lay hull?!
TOC or someone with more boat building experience can explain it better. When they build the hull they shoot the resin with a dry lay instead of just letting to dry they roll it out to remove excess resin. You get the same hull just a light version. The Champion I owned was built as a demo boat. It had a dry lay hull, drilled stringers, and shaved box lids.
Kinda like an acid dipped body on a drag car, just to reduce weight? My question would be why? A Charger may never be as fast as some other boat. But the Charger will out fish them for comfort. You not going to be more comfortable having spent more money to go fast, I don't think. Lastly, unless a company was specifically in the business of "dry laying" (still a poor term in my opinion. Reminds me of high school dates) would a hull would it be warranted?
Now I'm going to my quiet place and remember my high school days
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You need Pat Goffs expertise on this. He’s talked about the black hulls, glitter hulls and hulls made in the summer all being heavier by up to 100lbs.
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Pervert......
Not sure about anyone else but after owning one if I ever ordered a boat I would ask about it. Just curious if Charger ever did them or if with a Champion guy there that has done them if it is even a possibility. I said it was a thought didn't say it was a good one.
One of my buddies ordered a "light layup" 190 in 1991, he still has it, no problems with it after all these years. It is garage kept and only gets out once or twice a year now for the last 15 years, but is still maintained and looks new.
Pat has probably forgotten more about building boats than 99 percent of the people on BBC. Not putting anyone down at all, it's just that he knows his stuff.
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