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My Monterey

Rip5

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Posts posted by Rip5


  1. NADA is just a guide. Where you are located will change the value of the boat, and NADA will never reflect that,

    Just use NADA as a baseline for pricing, not as a bible. Check what similar boats sell for ( a dealer can tell you that), then

    consider your location and go from there. Over-analyzing every option the boat has to determine it's true value with NADA

    alone is not a good way to determine what a good price for the boat would be.


  2. Confusing post, title says 322, text body says 233.

     

    By the picture, it is obviously a 233 EX.

     

    It really depends on how old the boat is. That hatch was likely made in the factory, and not

    outsourced from a supplier. If so, then depending on the year, you may not be able to order

    one from a local dealer, who will order it from the Monterey factory. That is the only way you will

    get an exact replacement. Highly unlikely you will find an aftermarket manufacturer that makes

    one exactly like your's.

     

    Most probable option, is have one fabricated at a local fiberglass shop, use your current one as a

    template/mold for the new one.

     

    If it is not broken, you could just add some new non-skid coating to it and call it good, which will be

    hundreds of dollars less than a new one, or fabricated one.


  3. You should have shown a picture of the actual cartridge, easier to tell if we could see it.

     

    As far as the faucet goes 90% of them are made by Sandvik. Does not have to be exact same style as

    you currently have, just get one you like with same spacing between handles etc.

     

    Something like this is plug and play.

     

    http://www.boatersplus.com/scandvik-70002.html?utm_source=shopzilla&utm_medium=cse&utm_content=LS-390-70002&utm_campaign=shopzilla&gclid=CMTa8pecmcUCFYI8aQodJ1oA1g


  4. I would save your money. a shiney anchor (SS) is hugely expensive, heavy, and holds no better than aluminum. Besides, the 18 seconds of time it takes you to pull out the anchor, toss it in, and set it, know one will be able to see how pretty it is when on the bottom of the lake.

    Stern anchor, same Danforth style aluminum as the bow anchor, but can be slightly smaller.

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