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What is the difference between a bass boat and a walleye boat?
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jshock wrote:
What is the difference between a bass boat and a walleye boat? about 20,000 dollars -- SpecTastic Wiggle Rig, Fishing lure remote control See lure video you won't believe http://ezknot.com/videos.html |
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jshock wrote:
What is the difference between a bass boat and a walleye boat? A walleye boat tends to have more freeboard and a bit more deadrise. Dan |
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Rodney Long wrote:
jshock wrote: What is the difference between a bass boat and a walleye boat? about 20,000 dollars Hardly. Compare the Ranger 620VS and the 520VX. They are about the same and both huge bucks. Dan |
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On Dec 18, 1:53 pm, jshock wrote:
What is the difference between a bass boat and a walleye boat? I have owned both a Ranger walleye boat and now a bass boat. A walleye boat has a deeper V, sits higher in the water and handles rough water better than a bass boat. Walleye boats tend to have more open space inside and less compartment area. Also bass boats have a large back platform to stand on. Some walleye boats have a removable back platform but it is usually small in comparison to a bass boat. Walleye boats tend to be set up for trolling and for the fisherman to be able to move around to handle the trolling rods. Bass boats sit shallower and allow the fisherman to be able to see down into the water better. Bass boats are also much faster as there is less hull so they weigh less.Bass boats will also go shallower so if you fish shallow weed flats or pad fields a bass boat would be better. So it depends on what you are fishing. If you are on big lakes like Erie a walleye boat would probably be better. I went to the bass masters classic in Chicago years ago and most of the bass boats couldn't go out on Lake Michigan because it was too rough. Walleye guys wouldn't have thought twice about going out there because that is just normal water for them. If you fish in-land lakes that don't get that rough a bass boat might be better. |
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gwilber: Thanks for the straight dope. I live in Wisconsin near Lake
Winnebago -- a large, shallow inland lake that gets pretty choppy. I definitely need a deep hull than a bass boat. I guess they're called Walleye boats because walleye tend to hang out in deeper water, which suggests bigger lakes susceptible to heavier chop. |
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On Dec 19, 10:52 am, jshock wrote:
gwilber: Thanks for the straight dope. I live in Wisconsin near Lake Winnebago -- a large, shallow inland lake that gets pretty choppy. I definitely need a deep hull than a bass boat. I guess they're called Walleye boats because walleye tend to hang out in deeper water, which suggests bigger lakes susceptible to heavier chop. I live by Bonduel and work in Appleton. Chris Rennert who is on here quite a bit fishes Winnebago for smallmouths. Good luck on your boat search. |
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![]() "gwilber" wrote in message ... On Dec 19, 10:52 am, jshock wrote: gwilber: Thanks for the straight dope. I live in Wisconsin near Lake Winnebago -- a large, shallow inland lake that gets pretty choppy. I definitely need a deep hull than a bass boat. I guess they're called Walleye boats because walleye tend to hang out in deeper water, which suggests bigger lakes susceptible to heavier chop. I live by Bonduel and work in Appleton. Chris Rennert who is on here quite a bit fishes Winnebago for smallmouths. Good luck on your boat search. Some bass boats will handle chop fairly well. I can run 3-4 footers at 60MPH with my Bass Cat. Its a hard ride, but safe and controllable. The older Champions were a really good ride in Chop. I hear the newer hulls not so much. I suppose if one searched around there may be others. For big money you can run a FastCat I suppose, and My Baker Custom (tunnel) handled chop about as good as anything, and it set really low to the water when fishing. Amyway, in general a deep V sportfishing boat or a "walleye boat" will handle the rough stuff better and will handle bigger rough stuff. But it will be nowhere near as fast as a pad bottom bass boat of similar length and weight with a comporable outboard. Might also consider a "bay boat." Its a really nice compromise between deep V and top speed. They tend to be sold a little bigger than bass boats on average so top speeds will be a little less than you might think, but not pad, and they are designed for casual ocean running and out running a storm to get to harbor safely. They typically are pretty well priced too from what I have seen for a good size boat. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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Jshock, I have been fishing Lake Erie all my life and I am 56 years old. I
remember when walleyes were practically non-existent in Lake Erie. But anyway, a walleye boat has more freeboard than most boats, has a wider beam and is a 'deep V' or a 'modified deep V' hull. Livewells are probly less than on Bass boats, but Bass boats ride on top of the water, like a john-boat. Walleye boats are rough-water boats cuz that's when walleyes usually tend to bite, is when the weather gets nasty. Large coolers are the norm on walleye boats cuz the fish are bigger and the catch is larger. Wallaye boats usually have plenty of power, too. A lot of them are I/O's, but I prefer outboards cuz they kick up the power faster, but each to his own. walleye boats usually have more fishing room and some are open bow boats...but the difference is mainly the hull design and the freeboard...I would say that just about any rough-water boat could be a walleye boat as long as it has good power. HTH.......Major Magnetic "jshock" wrote in message ... What is the difference between a bass boat and a walleye boat? -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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