MapisM
Well-Known Member
Naah, there's nothing wrong in what the other posters said.maybe MapisM might wish to defend his comments??
In any MoBo meant as a weekend toy for coastal cruising (which is what most pleasure MoBos are designed to be), it's very nice to have two blocks. If the electronic gizmo in one of them goes nuts, there's the other one. And of course there are much more chances to grab a net with two exposed shafts/legs/props/rudders, compared to an extremely protected single screw spinning behind a huge keel. So it's good to have two of each. And so forth.
See, maybe I misunderstood what you said in your OP, because by "offshore cruiser" I assumed you were interested in long range boats - hence my reply along the lines of ocean going vessels. Which are in another league compared to the average pleasure boat. A league where the engine reliability is obviously paramount, but the same is true also for economy, range, accessibility, onboard systems, fuel filtration with separate day tanks, and so on.
In these boats, most builders and owners seem to agree that the single is the way to go, at least up to a certain size, let's say 65 feet or so. Above that, there are other reasons which make twins a sensible alternative.
And at the end of the day, it's also down to personal preferences.
'Fiuaskme, I'd rather be at 500Nm from the nearest coast on a steel boat as a Molokai Strait and the likes, spinning a single, commercial rated engine, than on a Pershing 115 with 2 hi-performance diesels and 1 gas turbine.
PS: coming to think of it, I'm not even sure that the Pershing could make it, to that 500Nm distant coast...
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