Hey Guys,
First post, completely new guy here. Former Moomba Owner (I know I know, but it was a good deal on a first boat) however, yesterday we just pulled the trigger on a pristine, perfectly maintained, always stored indoors 2007 Tige RZ2 with only 66 hours on it. After months of shopping and a little negotiating on this one I think we got a really fair deal on it.
The boat has no Ballast system which will be the first modification we tackle. From what I have read this isn't all that bad of a situation and it seems that starting with a clean slate may be the preferred method by some. After reading the forum for the past two weeks and trying to discover the best way to go about what to install for a ballast system my head spinning. Tons of great advice but I still am unsure what I need to do. I PM'd chpthril this morning and I am sure just as I have seen with everyone else he will be able to offer some great advice.
Any suggestions are appreciated but I do have a few specific questions.
1. How bad is the imperfection in the surf wave with the 2007 swim platform? Will I need to buy a later model swim platform or is it tolerable?
2. Ive seen someone mention that they prefer to use zero ballast he bow on the RZ2. Thoughts on this? Do I even need to drill holes and plum a bow ballast or should I just get a loose 600lb sac and a tsunami pump in case I feel like I need it?
3. Now for the question that is probably gonna make waves. Has anyone ever used the new Ronix Eight.3 Telescope bags and pump in instead of a fully automated system? As much as I would love to save a couple thousand dollars I am 99% sure I will just spring for a fully automated ballast system. However the new Ronix Telescope bags an pumps are appealing. They seem to fill up incredibly fast, while offering flexibility, cost savings
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYDALegB5Fo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AT69pSK3E3E
http://www.wakemakers.com/eight-3
Pros from what I can tell;
- Much faster to fill and drain. 2-3 minutes.
- No Holes drilled
- Less equipment usually means less failure. Pump fails just get on Amazon prime and get a new pump in 2 days that I don't have to install.
- Fill and drain from goofy to normal in minutes.
- Flexibility of being able to use the opposite bag on the seat if its Just my wife and I giving me the option of 2200lbs on one side which could probably sink the boat.
- Easily remove the bags for cleaning or to dry out the lockers.
- Cost is a fraction of a fully automated system. 2 x 1100Lb sacs $520 + 1 X 600lb bow sac $300 + 2 x Pumps (In case 1 fails) $320 = Total system $1140
Cons;
Obviously dealing with a manual pump.
Weight is weight so I'm certain the boat would perform just as well with 2 1100lb sacs in the lockers. Possibly even better considering I would have the flexibility of up to 2200lbs on one side that I can move around. After typing this up I have convinced myself even more this might not be a bad option.
I know some will have strong opinions on this but please let me know your thoughts.
Thanks,
JB
First post, completely new guy here. Former Moomba Owner (I know I know, but it was a good deal on a first boat) however, yesterday we just pulled the trigger on a pristine, perfectly maintained, always stored indoors 2007 Tige RZ2 with only 66 hours on it. After months of shopping and a little negotiating on this one I think we got a really fair deal on it.
The boat has no Ballast system which will be the first modification we tackle. From what I have read this isn't all that bad of a situation and it seems that starting with a clean slate may be the preferred method by some. After reading the forum for the past two weeks and trying to discover the best way to go about what to install for a ballast system my head spinning. Tons of great advice but I still am unsure what I need to do. I PM'd chpthril this morning and I am sure just as I have seen with everyone else he will be able to offer some great advice.
Any suggestions are appreciated but I do have a few specific questions.
1. How bad is the imperfection in the surf wave with the 2007 swim platform? Will I need to buy a later model swim platform or is it tolerable?
2. Ive seen someone mention that they prefer to use zero ballast he bow on the RZ2. Thoughts on this? Do I even need to drill holes and plum a bow ballast or should I just get a loose 600lb sac and a tsunami pump in case I feel like I need it?
3. Now for the question that is probably gonna make waves. Has anyone ever used the new Ronix Eight.3 Telescope bags and pump in instead of a fully automated system? As much as I would love to save a couple thousand dollars I am 99% sure I will just spring for a fully automated ballast system. However the new Ronix Telescope bags an pumps are appealing. They seem to fill up incredibly fast, while offering flexibility, cost savings
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYDALegB5Fo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AT69pSK3E3E
http://www.wakemakers.com/eight-3
Pros from what I can tell;
- Much faster to fill and drain. 2-3 minutes.
- No Holes drilled
- Less equipment usually means less failure. Pump fails just get on Amazon prime and get a new pump in 2 days that I don't have to install.
- Fill and drain from goofy to normal in minutes.
- Flexibility of being able to use the opposite bag on the seat if its Just my wife and I giving me the option of 2200lbs on one side which could probably sink the boat.
- Easily remove the bags for cleaning or to dry out the lockers.
- Cost is a fraction of a fully automated system. 2 x 1100Lb sacs $520 + 1 X 600lb bow sac $300 + 2 x Pumps (In case 1 fails) $320 = Total system $1140
Cons;
Obviously dealing with a manual pump.
Weight is weight so I'm certain the boat would perform just as well with 2 1100lb sacs in the lockers. Possibly even better considering I would have the flexibility of up to 2200lbs on one side that I can move around. After typing this up I have convinced myself even more this might not be a bad option.
I know some will have strong opinions on this but please let me know your thoughts.
Thanks,
JB
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