Congrads Kurt and Bev on your new TC255..you’re going to love it!
Stay mellow and realize that it may take several years of cruising on your new ride to discover what you like to do… and don’t. that’s normal. We are at 6 years ownership in Feb, and on the boat tonight (and the last 3 weeks), and still discovering ‘what works and what doesn’t for us”.
Agree a 10kg Rocna with lots of chain is the best compromise. The stainless version is very pretty. My last 4 trailer boats had a Lewmar windlass, and it would not swallow any chain/rode splice unless it was genuine ACCO US-made G3/HT chain over a professional splice to genuine Lewmar 8 plait rode (which does lay down in the anchor locker very nicely compared to any competition). Lewmar apparently regards this as a ‘feature’, not a ‘bug’ and is very proud of this.
The best stern/to sand beach anchor is the 14# Lewmar plow, which fits (barely) in a fish locker with SS lead and rode if you back up to soft sand beaches, which you won’t be doing until you take your rig to Florida, which you should.
No Suzuki 175 TC255 owners are currently posting that I know of. I’d rec’d a 4 blade prop with stern lift properties and a lower pitch than the go-fast crowd would use. Your TomCat will gain weight with age (a universal phenom) and as you guys add ‘nice to have’ plus ‘must have’ stuff. A lower pitch prop helps compensate for this, with better grunt around the docks and in keeping the boat on plane at the lowest possible speeds on top of the slop. There will always be slop. Although politically incorrect to say so, Alaskan boaters in general are expected to be more self-reliant (extra gas filters, spark plugs, etc) than those in, say, Naples, FL.
David M has excellent points. We retrofitted Cat O’Mine with 100% Marinebeam LED lights and now ‘lights’ are the #10 or lower 12V DC draw, #1 being fridge on 12v, #2 being windlass (which may have a lot of use with the engines off in our case) and #3 being electronics suite, some of which we leave on at anchor (AIS transmit and anchor drag alarm on ). Every Brat will differ on this, and again thanks David for a succinct summary that applies to the 99%.
Consider the Victron 702 battery monitor, which will give you precise (I like precise, can you tell?) readouts of 12v amps in and amps out of the House bank and battery voltage (only) of an additional battery of your choice.
The low-bid alternative is the Blue Seas 12V meter to 4 digits (ie, 12.22V) at about $34 on Amazon. The 3 digit $6 car meters are worthless for this.
Consider having the dealer install handholds over the stbd waste pumpout and the port water inlet, over the eyebrow so no ceiling or core penetration issues. If anyone can hold onto the roof rails while unscrewing either of these, we want to see the pictures. My personal wingspan is 4-6 inches short at 6 ft ½ inch (previously 6 ft 1 inch). Also above the aft door, but below bimini level, through the eyebrow, no ceiling penetration.
To date we won’t haul around a Honda 2000IU, though we have two for home standby use. It’s a powerful little bugger, esp compared to solar panels.
Best of luck in your travels and you guys decide what works best for you.
I always advise that new TC255 owners adopt our boating philosophy, which is
“if total damages after deductibles are under $1,000, and no one is seriously injured or killed, then it was a good boating day!”
Cheers from the edge of the Everglades!
John