Ted, I own a 95 H26 and have seen and talked
to owners of the Mac 26. The last conversation was this summer with a new owner of a new Mac. I have also sailed with and against this boat, but never on one. The boat is beautiful, has nice lines and some very nice features.The Mac package does have a rather high entry cost, and to me it did not justify this expense, nor did it appear able to return much of that value upon resale. There is a very small group of buyers that want this type of boat. The 50 hp motor is expensive to start with. IMHO the added linkage and structural weight needed for it to function heavily compromises the sailing of the boat.The boat is not a true sailboat and falls very short when trying to be a powerboat. IMHO the only improvement it adds to a sailboat is the ability to haul ass home when the thunderboomers attack. I also feel that this boat with a much smaller OB would be further compromised.It appears to be much less than a stable platform as a powerboat and I would guess it is frightining to operate while trying to pull skiiers if it could. Most powerboats under 30' seem to want to do this.The cockpit is also very busy and small.In my opinion it is a bad buy. When sailing you need the best sailboat you can afford. IMHO this combo is not very good as either type of boat.About the Hunter 260. Our 26 is almost a carbon copy of the 260 except the 260 has many improvements.My Hunter is a dream to tow, even with my 1981 Ford 1/2 ton pickup.(300 cu in with 4 speed, 2 wd) We can raise the mast, rig the boat, pile in the coolers and gear, launch and set sail within 1 and 1/2 hour. I also, so far, can beat any boat on our section of the Columbia River, EXCEPT that damn Mac when we're "haulin ass" to beat that boomer, or to have that "Miller Time".RayS/V SpeedyPS. The gasoline odor from the ammount of fuel used in this boat is also a turn-off.