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Top It Off- To Replace Your Hard Top or Not?

Top It Off by Ric Burnley img_8535The elegant beauty of a classic sportfishing boat is as appealing as Raquel Welch in a bearskin bikini. While her pouting eyes and perky attributes never lose their allure, the cave-girl bodice has to go. The same holds true for a classic sportfishing boat. While the old girl curves still get the blood flowing, sometimes that old hardtop needs to be updated. That why Capt. Jimmy Bayne took his 58-foot Paul Mann Sniper to Bluewater Yachts in Hampton, Virginia. The boat was 13 years old, he explains, and the hardtop needed some work. Bluewater partner Earle Hall saw more reasons for Bayne to replace his top than repair it. In addition to modernizing the look, the connections were starting to work loose and there were also some structural issues, he recalls. So Bayne began the complicated process of redesigning and replacing his hardtop. The guys at Bluewater made it a lot easier, Bayne says. Hall adds, In the past 25 years, weve replaced over 100 hardtops, he says, so weve got it down to a science. There are two main reasons that a boat owner should replace his hardtop: esthetic and structural. Some boatbuilders want to build boats but they consider the hardtop a pain in the butt, quips Hall. He feels that the top, tubing, curtains and electronics complete the look of the boat. It really the icing on the cake. An outdated hardtop will feature smaller tubing with truss-style perimeter rails spaced apart with spools while a modern top uses a single, larger tube and utilizes shape and crown to achieve strength. I was standing on the deck at Pirate Cove and looking down on the boats in Millionaire Row and I could see wire ties and cables and sloppy work, he says. Hall remembers building hardtops in the 1980s. We used a double row of 1.5-inch tubing around the perimeter rail, he recalls, and we had to run the tubes through the curtains. In the past 30 years, Hall has learned that a single, larger tube around the perimeter increases strength and cuts down on weight and profile. Using a single perimeter also allows them to use……………………………….This article is a good example of the editorial you will receive in each and every issue of InTheBite. Below you can purchase the entire back issue but first here is a testimony from a boat owner who reads InTheBite: bob_art …………………………….Click Here to continue reading this article which appeared in our April/May 2015 issue. April/May 2015 Issue of InTheBite