Dealer said the 150 will get 45 to 50 mph. They also said 200 will get 55 to 60 mph. They cited Lund as the source for these numbers.
I'm thinking I could live with 45 mph. However, I'm worried about loss of performance with pleasure boating, tubing and such. Also I would like to be able to ride with confidence should the weather turn rough.
That's what I was thinking, too. Come spring time I may still be in my ocean kayak big game 2.
How would you guess this boat would run with the 150 four stroke on it?
I found this post while searching up and down for information on this boat. I am so close to pulling the trigger on one. I live in SD where it seems we have 25 mph wind every week and 10-15 mph seems to be a normal day. This seems like the boat that will let me get where I want to go even in those conditions. I'm also looking for a boat that could double for recreation and the 200 hp Verado should be able to do that.
I'm wondering how things have went for the past year? Are you still loving it? Have you found any short-comings?
I see you went with dual Talon's. Does that affect hull warranty for Lund? I've heard it voids Ranger warranties.
How does the boat draft in shallow water? Have you felt limited in how shallow you can take it?
Hey I was wondering if anyone has recently visited Sleepy Creek Lake in Berkeley Springs, WV. I see they have a campground. Two things are easy to find out about this place, 1) the road in is awful 2) the bass are big. I'm hesitant to take my sedan with kayaks on the roof down the road. Does any know if this is possible without an AWD vehicle?
Last year I used 30lb braid with a long 12 or 14 lb mono leader. I did this because mono was too stretchy as a main line and I worry about braid being too obvious to fish. It worked very well. It also kept the rod usable for top water.
This year I'm going to start with 15lb fluoro as a main line. Which sacrifices top water ability, but should make the setup better for cranking and jerkbaits.
Yea 8' is too cumbersome to fish from a kayak in my opinion. I also don't see it as being ideal for twitching a glide. Also deep diving cranks isn't one my go to techniques, so I don't want to dedicate a rod to it.
So for versatility and comfort I'm focusing on the 706cb.
That sounds like what I'm looking for. I have the 705cb which is a phenomenal rod. It sounds like the 706cb takes over right where it starts to drop off in the 3/4 oz range. 1/2 oz is the sweet spot for 705cb.
At times I feel under powered when retrieving a DD22 or 6xd. The rod also feels stressed when loading the G2 shellcracker, S waver and Super Spook. I was hoping the 706cb would step up for these applications, but also remain versatile enough to spread in to some other applications like chatterbaits.
I've been thinking about this rod for a while now and am thinking of using it for cranks 14 feet and deeper, big squarebills, blackdog shell cracker, s wavers and super spooks.
Anybody have input on it yet?
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