Yes they are, and they are pioneers in manufacturing welded aluminum boats right here WA. I have a 16' Sportsman and, like Marc, had a 14' Hewescraft open fisherman before that. Great little boat, almost sorry to have sold it, but we sure like our new one. BTW, Hewescraft has added a whole new series to their line-up this year - the return of the Open Fisherman, but as Marc mentioned, smallest size available is 16'.Bodofish wrote:Right on that one Marc! Good clean rides.Marc Martyn wrote:You might look into Hewescraft also. I had a 14' fisherman several years ago and loved it. I have heard that they only make boats now 16' and up.tallman8251 wrote:Lookin at buying a lowe 17 ft fish and ski. Anyone own any lowe boats or know anything about them?
Thanks
Tallman
I can't offer any pro/con about tallman's pending purchase, as I don't own, nor have I ever owned, a Lowe boat. Then again, I've never owned a Lund, or Alumaweld, or Crestliner, or Smokercraft, or a whole slew of other brands of aluminum boats, so I can't offer a qualified opinion on them either.
My research shows Lowe has been in the boat building business for 35 years, so they must be doing something right or they'd have been long gone by now. Hewescraft and Lund both started building boats in 1948, so they obviously are doing something right too. Hewescraft is a fine boat, but probably not the best choice for a fish and ski application as they are designed more to the purpose of fishing.
I'll only say this with reference to the number of boats that were totalled vs those that weren't, I'm in the auto collision repair business, and I see totalled cars all the time. Pick a brand, none more than another I'll tell you. Why? Because the reason a car or truck gets totalled rarely has anything to do with the quality of its construction. Instead, when a vehicle isn't totalled due to being damaged beyond economic repair (like the engine compartment now occupies the front seat for example) it's because the of the age of the vehicle and the current market value prior to the accident. Even though the vehicle was in perfect running condition prior to the accident, it doesn't change the fact that its market value may only have been a couple thousand dollars. After the accident, it might take $1800 - $2000 to repair it but that takes it way beyond an insurance company's total loss threshold, so it's cheaper for the insurance company to pay the owner off rather than repair their 12 year old Caprice or Taurus. Guess which scenario I see more of? That's right, cars totalled due to being beyond economical repair. The bottom line here is the insurance companies are all about managing risk, in other words, making money.
What does all of this have to do with how many Lowe's boats Jmay might see totalled? It's possible he sees more of them totalled than any other because there are more of them than any other. It's also possible that factors other than construction quality are at play here and that info hasn't been presented. I always look to what's behind a total loss condition, not just the fact that more Chevy's, Dodges, Fords, Toyotas, Hondas, etc. are totalled out.
I hope that helps make a little more sense. :thumright