Can anybody clear this up for me

Nautical

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Coastal would be the operative word here, certainly not Offshore in the true sense, more suited to river or estuary cruising, if memory serves bit flat bottomed but was a long time ago I saw one, 100hp on that baby would be over cooking it in my view was never designed to be a flyer.

Sorry if thats not what you wanted to hear.
 

RobWales

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Mike,

I suggest that this particular boat would not be ideal for the area's you mention,knowing these waters quite well myself I would suggest a boat built with coastal capabilities in mind and not estury/river/canal use.

So a blunt answer to your question is NO sorry.

Sure you will get more replies soon however.

Good luck
Rob
 

sarabande

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No, just that Offshore means something like 50 miles away from land in nasty conditions. That means strong design, and expensive engines and other kit.

Stick with "Coastal", say up to within sight of land, and you'll certainly find something in your price band.

Good hunting.
 

Major Catastrophe

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[ QUOTE ]
Ok Maybe I asked wrong then will the boat I am looking at be sutible for that you say . Land in sight?

[/ QUOTE ]

You can see Calais from Dover and Dover from Calais, but would you cross the Channel in it? As I said in your other post, once you are afloat, you suddenly get a realisation of what you and the boat is capable of and stay within the limits.
 

gjgm

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Incidentally, there is a new law about smoking in public. Kindly amend you avatar, or I ll have to get Judge Keith to inprison you. /forums/images/graemlins/tongue.gif
 
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