https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2020/05/27/2039793/0/en/BRP-Advances-Marine-Strategy-by-Focusing-on-Boats-and-New-Technologies.html
Boats & Motors
Evinrude is no longer
As far as resale value of outboards in general I doubt they will lose much for the foreseeable future. Evinrude E-Tec equipped boats both used and for trade in will likely take a good hit value wise. If the Ghost Motor by BRP is indeed an electric gas hybrid I can’t see where current technology battery wise is workable for a boat. Too big (space needed) too heavy ( you have to float it). It is going to take some technology breakthroughs and engineering genius to make that cost effective, functional and trouble free.
One of the news articles I read about Evinrude ceasing production of their outboard line stated that the agreement with Mercury was just to provide outboards for their boat lines. It also stated that the E-Tec technology and patents were not for sale. That article did have several quotes and statements from the BRP CEO and president stating such. I wonder if their new Ghost Motor program and other technology they plan to develop will still use the E-Tec technology just not in outboard form.
I am a bit surprised that they didn’t sell the evinrude line and technology to someone else - they really were a good product.
I’m sure that was part of the negotiations with Mercury. I still think that BRP will sell Alumacraft too. Yamaha would be my first guess as to who would be interested. That would put them in a great position to compete with Johnny Morris. Yamaha already owns Skeeter and G3. Alumacraft can compete with the Ranger Aluminum line. To me, if Yamaha has the money it would be great investment. They could certainly take market share from Lund and Tracker.
11 years and1,600 hours on my 150 Etec - I’ve been very happy with it.
I’ve long felt that Etecs were the only motor I’d buy again.
Guess that option is off of the table...
I have a 50 Yami on my pontoon, and a 15 Yami on my small fishing boat, and they’ve been equally as solid, but I liked the Etec better because it was a two stroke, weighed less, and had a lot of get up and go.
looks like my next outboard will be a Yami!
I am a bit surprised that they didn’t sell the evinrude line and technology to someone else - they really were a good product.
The other company had Yamaha build their four strokes for years, stole their technology, built a plant in China after getting tax hand outs from Wisconsin tax payers, then made a ton of money on low Chinese labor.
Then they got a pass on tariffs from the government. I will never run a Mercury on my boat, no matter what happens.
too late to the game, the other mfg really did a fine job of promoting 4strokes.... and folks re-powered or bought new rigs with 4strokes...
I think the E-tec was a superior product... my opinion, just couldn't beat the promotion done by the industry for 4strokes
said this on another Evinrude thread, that ghost boat might be powered like a Sea Doo... that would fit in with BRP's innovational thinking ... could rock the small tin boat world!