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For trips within 25 miles of shore, a single engine is a better choice, IMHO, but, if you venture beyond normal VHF ship-to-shore range (24 miles assuming 8' antenna), two engines are better, whether they are paired twins, or main with auxiliary.
If you fish the Middle Grounds 85-105 miles off Florida's west coast, losing your only motor 1/3 of the way back is a major bummer, and a potentialy life-endangering event. Even a 15hp auxiliary on a 25' boat can bring you home from 60 miles out in about 10-12 hours. Much better than paying a commercial towing company $200 or more an hour to bring you back, assuming you're near enough to one of the Petrocom cell phone repeaters to call for help. And they charge up to $20 a minute to patch your call through. I know TowBoat US will generally NOT come get your boat over 25 miles offshore because of their insurance coverages. SeaTow MAY come get your boat, but will likely invoke salvage fees on your insurance company or bill you for extraordinary costs, (which they may do by contract). That's why I always have two engines; in my case a main and an auxiliary on both boats that go into the ocean.
Finally, if you go out of sight of land, 406 EPIRB is a must.
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Common Sense is learning from your mistakes. Wisdom is learning from the other guy's mistakes. Fr. Frank says: Jesus liked fishing, too. He even walked on water to get to the boat! Currently without a SeaCraft ![]() (2) Pompano 12' fishing kayaks '73 Cobia 18' prototype "Casting Skiff", 70hp Mercury |
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