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Pelican Predator mini boats
Hi all,
I'm planning on purchasing a mini bass boat for pond fishing this season. I need to transport it it the back of my pickup. Most of the pontoon style mini boats can fit in the truck bed, however I have my eye on the Pelican Predator 103 or DLX. Can anyone tell me if these hulls fit in the bed of a full size truck? Many thanks. J |
Pelican Predator mini boats
John,
The Bass Hunter mini-pontoon boat I now have, with a beam of 48 inches across the gunwales, wedges snugly between the wheel wells of a small pickup like my old Nissan. Of course, it fits easily in a full-size pickup bed with plenty of room to spare.. The Pelican Predator 103 has a 61"-inch beam, and although that is across the gunwales and the modified v-hull means it takes up less room at rest across the truck bed, you're right to question whether it will go in easily. I can't answer that question. Are you planning to ever use this by yourself, or always with a buddy who can help you load the boat onto your pickup? You may be able to square your body to the boat, plant your feet firmly, and lift one end of it easily, but it's not nearly as easy when you're off to one side trying to hold up the front of the boat at about head height, and dragging the boat up a ramp so that you can rest it on the tailgate of your pickup. This is pretty tough to do with a 100-pound Bass Hunter. I bet the 165-pound Pelican Predator 103 is even harder for a single person to load. Another advantage of the Bass Hunter is that the battery isn't in a battery box. When I have to lift it myself, I can lighten the load considerably by removing the batter. In the Pelican, the battery is in a compartment. You can still remove it, of course, but you'll be tempted to try loading with the battery in place. Consider finding a small, used trailer that you can use to transport your boat. I've seen them for sale around $100 -- considerably cheaper than the doctor visits, CAT scans, lab work, etc. that you'll pay when you throw your back out. Joe -------------------- "John" wrote in message ... Hi all, I'm planning on purchasing a mini bass boat for pond fishing this season. I need to transport it it the back of my pickup. Most of the pontoon style mini boats can fit in the truck bed, however I have my eye on the Pelican Predator 103 or DLX. Can anyone tell me if these hulls fit in the bed of a full size truck? Many thanks. J |
Pelican Predator mini boats
On Mar 9, 4:32 pm, "Joe Haubenreich"
wrote: John, The Bass Hunter mini-pontoon boat I now have, with a beam of 48 inches across the gunwales, wedges snugly between the wheel wells of a small pickup like my old Nissan. Of course, it fits easily in a full-size pickup bed with plenty of room to spare.. The Pelican Predator 103 has a 61"-inch beam, and although that is across the gunwales and the modified v-hull means it takes up less room at rest across the truck bed, you're right to question whether it will go in easily. I can't answer that question. Are you planning to ever use this by yourself, or always with a buddy who can help you load the boat onto your pickup? You may be able to square your body to the boat, plant your feet firmly, and lift one end of it easily, but it's not nearly as easy when you're off to one side trying to hold up the front of the boat at about head height, and dragging the boat up a ramp so that you can rest it on the tailgate of your pickup. This is pretty tough to do with a 100-pound Bass Hunter. I bet the 165-pound Pelican Predator 103 is even harder for a single person to load. Another advantage of the Bass Hunter is that the battery isn't in a battery box. When I have to lift it myself, I can lighten the load considerably by removing the batter. In the Pelican, the battery is in a compartment. You can still remove it, of course, but you'll be tempted to try loading with the battery in place. Consider finding a small, used trailer that you can use to transport your boat. I've seen them for sale around $100 -- considerably cheaper than the doctor visits, CAT scans, lab work, etc. that you'll pay when you throw your back out. Joe --------------------"John" wrote in message ... Hi all, I'm planning on purchasing a mini bass boat for pond fishing this season. I need to transport it it the back of my pickup. Most of the pontoon style mini boats can fit in the truck bed, however I have my eye on the Pelican Predator 103 or DLX. Can anyone tell me if these hulls fit in the bed of a full size truck? Many thanks. J Thanks so much for your insight Joe. Sounds like I will be fishing with a buddy by default. I had considered the battery compartment a plus, that much less clutter, but I definitely see your point about lightening the load. Thanks again. |
Pelican Predator mini boats
"John" wrote in message
... On Mar 9, 4:32 pm, "Joe Haubenreich" wrote: John, The Bass Hunter mini-pontoon boat I now have, with a beam of 48 inches across the gunwales, wedges snugly between the wheel wells of a small pickup like my old Nissan. Of course, it fits easily in a full-size pickup bed with plenty of room to spare.. The Pelican Predator 103 has a 61"-inch beam, and although that is across the gunwales and the modified v-hull means it takes up less room at rest across the truck bed, you're right to question whether it will go in easily. I can't answer that question. Are you planning to ever use this by yourself, or always with a buddy who can help you load the boat onto your pickup? You may be able to square your body to the boat, plant your feet firmly, and lift one end of it easily, but it's not nearly as easy when you're off to one side trying to hold up the front of the boat at about head height, and dragging the boat up a ramp so that you can rest it on the tailgate of your pickup. This is pretty tough to do with a 100-pound Bass Hunter. I bet the 165-pound Pelican Predator 103 is even harder for a single person to load. Another advantage of the Bass Hunter is that the battery isn't in a battery box. When I have to lift it myself, I can lighten the load considerably by removing the batter. In the Pelican, the battery is in a compartment. You can still remove it, of course, but you'll be tempted to try loading with the battery in place. Consider finding a small, used trailer that you can use to transport your boat. I've seen them for sale around $100 -- considerably cheaper than the doctor visits, CAT scans, lab work, etc. that you'll pay when you throw your back out. Joe --------------------"John" wrote in message ... Hi all, I'm planning on purchasing a mini bass boat for pond fishing this season. I need to transport it it the back of my pickup. Most of the pontoon style mini boats can fit in the truck bed, however I have my eye on the Pelican Predator 103 or DLX. Can anyone tell me if these hulls fit in the bed of a full size truck? Many thanks. J Thanks so much for your insight Joe. Sounds like I will be fishing with a buddy by default. I had considered the battery compartment a plus, that much less clutter, but I definitely see your point about lightening the load. Thanks again. Mini boat trailers can be had pretty cheap. http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...temnumber=5002 Put bearing buddies on it when you assemble it. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
Pelican Predator mini boats
"Bob La Londe" wrote in message
... "John" wrote in message ... On Mar 9, 4:32 pm, "Joe Haubenreich" wrote: John, The Bass Hunter mini-pontoon boat I now have, with a beam of 48 inches across the gunwales, wedges snugly between the wheel wells of a small pickup like my old Nissan. Of course, it fits easily in a full-size pickup bed with plenty of room to spare.. The Pelican Predator 103 has a 61"-inch beam, and although that is across the gunwales and the modified v-hull means it takes up less room at rest across the truck bed, you're right to question whether it will go in easily. I can't answer that question. Are you planning to ever use this by yourself, or always with a buddy who can help you load the boat onto your pickup? You may be able to square your body to the boat, plant your feet firmly, and lift one end of it easily, but it's not nearly as easy when you're off to one side trying to hold up the front of the boat at about head height, and dragging the boat up a ramp so that you can rest it on the tailgate of your pickup. This is pretty tough to do with a 100-pound Bass Hunter. I bet the 165-pound Pelican Predator 103 is even harder for a single person to load. Another advantage of the Bass Hunter is that the battery isn't in a battery box. When I have to lift it myself, I can lighten the load considerably by removing the batter. In the Pelican, the battery is in a compartment. You can still remove it, of course, but you'll be tempted to try loading with the battery in place. Consider finding a small, used trailer that you can use to transport your boat. I've seen them for sale around $100 -- considerably cheaper than the doctor visits, CAT scans, lab work, etc. that you'll pay when you throw your back out. Joe --------------------"John" wrote in message ... Hi all, I'm planning on purchasing a mini bass boat for pond fishing this season. I need to transport it it the back of my pickup. Most of the pontoon style mini boats can fit in the truck bed, however I have my eye on the Pelican Predator 103 or DLX. Can anyone tell me if these hulls fit in the bed of a full size truck? Many thanks. J Thanks so much for your insight Joe. Sounds like I will be fishing with a buddy by default. I had considered the battery compartment a plus, that much less clutter, but I definitely see your point about lightening the load. Thanks again. Mini boat trailers can be had pretty cheap. http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...temnumber=5002 Actually any small utility trailer will work. Just assemble the hubs with water proof wheel bearing grease and put bearing buddies on as I mentioned before. The one I gave the link for was setup for a small boat, but a small flatbead would work just as well for such a light boat, and is available cheaper. Put bearing buddies on it when you assemble it. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
Pelican Predator mini boats
I say go with the small used trailer, unless you want to spend more bucks to
install a small atv winch in the front of your truck bed (along with necessary accessories to make it all work). And then again, you might consider a simple pulley arrangement on the trailer that would give you greater leverage/power when dragging the boat aboard. Shelby Foles If you auto reply, you'd better get "the heck" outta my email address first. |
Pelican Predator mini boats
On Sun, 9 Mar 2008 08:19:40 -0700 (PDT), John
wrote: Hi all, I'm planning on purchasing a mini bass boat for pond fishing this season. I need to transport it it the back of my pickup. Most of the pontoon style mini boats can fit in the truck bed, however I have my eye on the Pelican Predator 103 or DLX. Can anyone tell me if these hulls fit in the bed of a full size truck? Many thanks. J Is there some overwelming reason you want to spend a chunk of money on that heavy of a small boat? You should be able to pick a up 10-12-14' v hull or jon boat for $200+/-. To that you can add a couple clamp on folding seats and a tiller TM, sonar and you're all set. Mine (12' v hull) fits nicely in the back of the PU, I can load / unload by myself (2 is easier). Granted it's not as pretty - but it fishes nicely and a lot less $$$. Jim |
Pelican Predator mini boats
On Mar 9, 10:19*am, John wrote:
Hi all, * * * I'm planning on purchasing a mini bass boat for pond fishing this season. I need to transport it it the back of my pickup. Most of the pontoon style mini boats can fit in the truck bed, however I have my eye on the Pelican Predator 103 or DLX. Can anyone tell me if these hulls fit in the bed of a full size truck? Many thanks. J Hi John: I just purchased the Predator DLX. It's not going to fit very well in your pickup truck and it's quite heavy, so it definitely cannot be handled by one person. However, I love it. It's got an aerated live well built in and the battery compartment is very accessible. It would be easy to take your battery in and out. The only thing I don't like is that the electrical outlets from the battery are all female, so you'll need the male connector to hook up your battery. I have not been able to find a male connector that is designed to be the plug-in end. I think the standard set-up is the other way around. So, I ended up buying the $21 connector that Pelican sells (I'm sure that was the idea, but it's a pain). I'm looking at either a small utility trailer 4' x 8' or a very small boat trailer for it. I'm having a hard time though knowing whether a standard 12' -14' boat trailer designed for a V-hull fishing boat will fit this tri-hull design that is only 10' long. If anyone has had success with this please let me know. Mike |
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