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All right, "What is this
nonsense about a Black Brant III, and why the new
design?" In order to properly understand the way life
goes out here in Devlin Boat Land, you must first of all
take a long distance view of the operation with enough
time factor thrown in to really view the scene in
geological perspective. Over the twenty some years that
I have been designing and building hunting boats, there
has been a lot of time and years with which to evolve
more than a couple of designs. My Dad says that I am an
almost constant "tinkerer", which is probably a nice way
to say that while I think my designs are the best
available and I believe in them without reservations,
that I am also aware that nothing in life is perfect and
that the way to Nirvana is to continually strive to do
better. All this might just be the internal conflict
with a Protestant work ethic or some other type of
spiritual psycho-babble but the bottom line is that many
of our designs get changed, little by little, until they
reach a better plateau of use.
But in some cases the new
design, while it has its strengths, doesn't in a
definitive way do the job that much better than the
preceding design. In the case of our Black Brant
designs, I already had a boat that did its job very
well. That job was to allow two to three hunters to
safely and efficiently hunt. But along came the desire
of some of us to travel faster under power in less draft
of water, thus was born the new design - the Black Brant
III. This boat is simply a shallower draft and faster
speed version of the Black Brant design, and if that is
what you need, then this is the boat for you. But the
difficulty of replacing the Black Brant was not simple
because it also did its job extremely efficiently. So if
you find that most of your hunting is in open water and
you really aren't travelling more than a couple of miles
from ramp to your hunting area, then the Black Brant
design is the best for your purposes. She is quite a bit deeper and
a reasonable amount slower than the Black Brant III.
But
if you are finding that you need to operate in shallower
water and are travelling quite a distance from
launch-ramp to the hunting area and a couple of inches
more of sitting blind height doesn't hurt, then by all
means choose the Black Brant III. In both cases, these
boats are about as thoroughbred of hunting boats as you
are going to find and both have undergone trial by fire
for more than a few hunting seasons. I hope you can make
up your mind as to which is the best for you….
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Specifications |
| Length |
14' |
| Beam |
5' 10" |
| Draft |
7 3/4" |
| Weight |
225 lbs |
| Speed |
20 mph (med. load) |
| Power |
25 hp outboard |
| Max load |
780 lbs |
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