options
Dear Mark, my wife and I took delivery of a 2002 H260 on June 12, 2001. We also racked our brains deciding which options to purchase. We settled on the following: first was fixed keel or W/B, we settled on W/B. The boat sails wonderfully, I can put it on a trailer any time I want and I can go places most sail boats can't. Its interesting to note that in the H260 manual the W/B is calssified as a class "C" (inshore) boat and the fixed keel is a class "B" (offshore) boat, so the fixed keel is definately more "seaworthy". However, my application is sailing the very shallow Great South Bay of Long Island, NY with my family and not offshore, blue water sailing. The W/B is great. Once we decided on the W/B, we had no other choice but to go with an outboard. We purchased a Honda 9.9, 4 cycle and again, it is perfect. I like the idea of having a modular type of boat. At the end of the season, I can remove the engine, take it to my dealer for service and store it in my basement. I have one less "thru hull" to worry about failing. As it turned out, other than pulling in and out of our canal, we never use it anyway. On June 12, I puchased 6 gals of fuel, and my tank is still half full (I almost said "half empty"). Again, you may loose some of that seaworthyness, but for my application, diesel would have definately been overkill. The next big decision was wheel or tiller steering. I went with the tiller, you definately free up so much room in the cockpit and installation of a tiller autopilot is much less expensive than a wheel autopilot. From what I have read in this site, purists usually go with a tiller, those who want that "big boat feeling" go with the wheel. I've been happy with our decision and have no desire to change to a wheel. Again, you will have to base your decision on your application. Our goal was to sail a straight 20 miles over to Fire Island, drop anchor, and live on the boat for the weekend. Cockpit and cabin space were critical, also the autopilot was important and, believe me, after the first 60 minutes on that straight line, you get tired, wheel or tiller. The marine head was a no brainer, since the goal was to live on the boat for weekends, and I had no desire to carry a port a potty. Roller furling is a must, if not for convience just for the safety in being able to reduce sail quickly. Also, stern rail seats (if you get a tiller, if you get a wheel there useless as you can't reach the wheel from the srs anyway), bimini and bow roller I also consider a must. We had our dealer do the bottom painting and they did a great job at a cost less than Hunter. We also upgraded the interior fabric and bought the cockpit cushions. This might have been a needless $1,000 expense but the quality was definately there and will not be duplicated in aftermarket products. That's about it with the exception of instrumentation. Hunter seemed very over priced on the speed and depth meter (around $1,000) and, again, another thru hull penitration. We went with an inexpensive Hummingbird ($125) for depth and a Garmin 76 ($225) GPS for everything, and I mean everything, else - spead, direction, location, trip meter. Also, for $26 you can purchase a cable to interface the GPS with the Raython ST1000 Autohhelm ($449) and the boat will literally sail itself to your pre-programed waypoints. However, we did play it safe and went with Hunters compass for $150 because its interesting how many times all this great technology fails and Hunter does a great job installing it. We definately saved a lot of money purchasing our own electronics and, in keeping with that modular theme, everything, except for the compass, is portable and removed from the boat when not in use. The battery seemed over priced at $125. Our local gas station mechanic picked us up two (2) Interstate Deep Cycle batteries for $150. Interstate has a wonderful web site for everything you may want to learn about marine, or batteries in general. The only mistake I feel that I probably made in my purchase was buying of the spare tire for the trailer for $143. This spare tire will "dry rot" long before it is ever used. Hope I didn't overkill this response. Good Luck and best wishes on your purchase! I would love to know how you made out on your purchase, drop me an email at rpfcpa@yahoo.com.regards, rpf