Ranger designs are almost obsessive about creating a small boat with a big luxury yacht feel. Hiding the outboard rigging is an example! On our Ranger having a stern thruster that is mostly not needed by an experienced boat handler was fun in till you do your own maintenance and have to pull the whole aft part of the boat apart to access it to replace the easly damaged sacrificial prop shaft pin. The interior side of the VHF antenna and lead was covered completly with multiple pieces of teak trim. Dana loved it, it is in every sense a luxury yacht. But for me everything in the 3 year old boat maintenance schedule like replacing the engine to water heater hoses was hidden behind layers of other hidden stuff. I knew I was in trouble when I had to cut, remove and redo the interior step so I could gain access to the engine salt water impeller on the front of the diesel only to realize that Yanmar had changed the pump design, flipped it around so that it all had to come off instead of the simple front plate of the earlier Yanmars I had been working on for years. It was non adjustable so the manual said I needed to cut the drive belt and then needed a special tool to reinstall a new one. The use of outboards will simplify them somewhat but they are still designed as extremely complex boats without regard to maintenance access.
I still think Rangers are great boats and l see many C-dory owners see them as a step up, but this is a cautionary tale for those who do their own maintenance and don't want to spend for expensive marine workers to do the extensive maintenance they need to be kept shipshape. This is why I think so many of the new boat owners like the one we bought ours from who had not even changed the original fuel filters or changed the oil, bail on them at the first big maintenance scheduled.