Thanks for your comments, I am hoping to have a better idea after tomorow.
My first reaction to the weight difference was the same, however I could not figure out why the Tige, with a thicker hull or whatever makes so much more weight would be louder. It seams that the opposite would be true.
I was very concerned about the Wegde thing after reading some of the posts on Wakeworld. But after looking at them, it realy does not hang down that low, and you would only use a small percentage of the time. Honestly I think it is a fresh approach to getting a hull lower in the water without adding water ballast. That gets back to weight difference. The Wedge is probably only sinking the Malibu hull to the level of the Tige because of the weight difference.
The weight difference seamed like a good thing to me at first, heavier boats are going to be safer. However that much difference is going to make a difference in fuel economy both with my tow rig and on the water.
While I am buying the boat for wakeboarding, I doubt that even 50% of the total runtime will be actually boarding. For example, getting from Kimberling City up to Cape Fair or down to Arkansas on Table Rock burned more fuel in the round trip with my boat than the day of boarding did. Add to that the Friday nights we go out on the local lake to just ride around and watch the sunset, my boat spends a lot of time cruising around.
Ultimately it is the dealer thing that really hangs me up. A few years ago I would have said who cares where you buy it, mine has run 8 years and never been to the dealer. But then I bought a Dodge Durango that was an absolute lemon. The dealer worked for 11 months, supplying rental cars to the tune of 700 bucks while it was in the shop and finally could not make it right. They bought it back and sold me another brand truck. We probably buy our next two vehicles from that dealer. So now I appreciate how important having a good dealer is. Here the Tige is the clear winner. This descision gets harder and harder.
My first reaction to the weight difference was the same, however I could not figure out why the Tige, with a thicker hull or whatever makes so much more weight would be louder. It seams that the opposite would be true.
I was very concerned about the Wegde thing after reading some of the posts on Wakeworld. But after looking at them, it realy does not hang down that low, and you would only use a small percentage of the time. Honestly I think it is a fresh approach to getting a hull lower in the water without adding water ballast. That gets back to weight difference. The Wedge is probably only sinking the Malibu hull to the level of the Tige because of the weight difference.
The weight difference seamed like a good thing to me at first, heavier boats are going to be safer. However that much difference is going to make a difference in fuel economy both with my tow rig and on the water.
While I am buying the boat for wakeboarding, I doubt that even 50% of the total runtime will be actually boarding. For example, getting from Kimberling City up to Cape Fair or down to Arkansas on Table Rock burned more fuel in the round trip with my boat than the day of boarding did. Add to that the Friday nights we go out on the local lake to just ride around and watch the sunset, my boat spends a lot of time cruising around.
Ultimately it is the dealer thing that really hangs me up. A few years ago I would have said who cares where you buy it, mine has run 8 years and never been to the dealer. But then I bought a Dodge Durango that was an absolute lemon. The dealer worked for 11 months, supplying rental cars to the tune of 700 bucks while it was in the shop and finally could not make it right. They bought it back and sold me another brand truck. We probably buy our next two vehicles from that dealer. So now I appreciate how important having a good dealer is. Here the Tige is the clear winner. This descision gets harder and harder.
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