Woody
Well-Known Member
I've never used mine. First thing I did is remove it from the boat and put it in the garage.
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Same. Other than the rare occasion mine is always up and usually has something on it.Oddly enough...ours never comes down! The cabin table stays away though..
I know where I'm having breakfast the next time we come to Cedar Point.Sometimes I need the big table for "breakfast."
I am with Todd320. Once we put in the filler cushion the table has not been backup. Our friends visited and have done the same on a Larson 370 and Rinker 350. Guess its really up to each owners preference.
Can you post a picture of the base?Our table is always in place. I think it's possible due to a few issues. One is the width of the boat, plus the Amberjack's more open layout, the table is not too large, it is an oval shape so there are no corners, plus the base is not fixed to a floor mount but is a weighted base on rubber legs. It's never shifted around even in rough weather. Perfect!
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Can't find a photo of the base right now, but will do next time I go to the boat (probably in late April). I originally bought the table from Sears of all places. It had a square plastic top attached to the metal extendable pole going to the weighted metal base/rubber feet. The base is actually a two piece design with a smaller thicker/heavier metal weight under a lighter shroud of finished metal. I learned NOT to cook breakfast with a butane stove on the table when it got hot enough to melt into the table top... OOPS. Instead of scrapping the whole thing, I found a teak table top at Flounder Pounder FL and secured it to the post with wood screws. Worked out great and have used it for 7-8 seasons now.Can you post a picture of the base?
Sometimes I need the big table for "breakfast."
SOOOOO - What time is breakfast and where?
Thanks!Can't find a photo of the base right now, but will do next time I go to the boat (probably in late April). I originally bought the table from Sears of all places. It had a square plastic top attached to the metal extendable pole going to the weighted metal base/rubber feet. The base is actually a two piece design with a smaller thicker/heavier metal weight under a lighter shroud of finished metal. I learned NOT to cook breakfast with a butane stove on the table when it got hot enough to melt into the table top... OOPS. Instead of scrapping the whole thing, I found a teak table top at Flounder Pounder FL and secured it to the post with wood screws. Worked out great and have used it for 7-8 seasons now.