The Last Gladiator-Lip Ship Edition
#1
Credit to Kurt on Offshoreonly for the pics and info!!
"-Stopped by Lip Ship Cigarette on the way home from Key West. Got a look at the very last Gladiator to be built. This Lip Ship Edition was just off the hook, in a league of its own for sure. Pictures don't do justice, the paint is just amazing, the deck looks like brushed stainless steel. The attention to detail and the level of quality put into this ride was very impressive to say the least. I wish I was in the position to give it a home!
Great job boys!
Kurt"
"-Stopped by Lip Ship Cigarette on the way home from Key West. Got a look at the very last Gladiator to be built. This Lip Ship Edition was just off the hook, in a league of its own for sure. Pictures don't do justice, the paint is just amazing, the deck looks like brushed stainless steel. The attention to detail and the level of quality put into this ride was very impressive to say the least. I wish I was in the position to give it a home!
Great job boys!
Kurt"
#3
Good one, DJ. That is one nice Glad. My buddy Kurt is the biggest Cig freak on the planet.
For you guys who aren't that into boats- one of the defining features of the Cig Gladiator is that it has no rubrail. It's my understanding that this is one of the main reasons for discontinuing the line- it adds so much expense to the build cost that Cig could no longer justify it.
Boats are generally built from two basic hull parts and the rubrail covers the seam where the topdeck joins the hull. Gotta be a fairly labor-intensive operation to get a satisfactory level of fit and finish over (roughly) 70 linear feet of fiberglass, and then to maintain that fit over time with the stresses and flexing that these boats are subjected to when used as intended.
(not a Gladiator- pic for instructional purposes only)
For you guys who aren't that into boats- one of the defining features of the Cig Gladiator is that it has no rubrail. It's my understanding that this is one of the main reasons for discontinuing the line- it adds so much expense to the build cost that Cig could no longer justify it.
Boats are generally built from two basic hull parts and the rubrail covers the seam where the topdeck joins the hull. Gotta be a fairly labor-intensive operation to get a satisfactory level of fit and finish over (roughly) 70 linear feet of fiberglass, and then to maintain that fit over time with the stresses and flexing that these boats are subjected to when used as intended.

(not a Gladiator- pic for instructional purposes only)
Last edited by jayboat; Feb 26, 2009 at 10:23 AM.
#4
That is just amazing. I'm not a boat guy, but something like that can make a believer out of anyone.
Dumb question... Those boats are obviously built for one purpose, speed and performance on the water, not creature comfort. So then are these boats as "long" as they are for the sake of pushing it across the water efficiently? Where, the length of the boat makes it go across the water much more efficiently than say, the 19 foot Cobalt I had once upon a time?
Dumb question... Those boats are obviously built for one purpose, speed and performance on the water, not creature comfort. So then are these boats as "long" as they are for the sake of pushing it across the water efficiently? Where, the length of the boat makes it go across the water much more efficiently than say, the 19 foot Cobalt I had once upon a time?
#5
Really, these are built for comfort at speed. Pretty luxurious up close. Longer length allows the hull to span greater wave lengths and surface chop -- with comfort at speed. Not so much about efficiency. Stepped bottoms (which your Cobalt did not have) are about efficiency.
#6
Originally Posted by Chokeu2
Dumb question... Those boats are obviously built for one purpose, speed and performance on the water, not creature comfort. So then are these boats as "long" as they are for the sake of pushing it across the water efficiently? Where, the length of the boat makes it go across the water much more efficiently than say, the 19 foot Cobalt I had once upon a time?
It's a little more complicated, and of course there is a point of diminishing returns.
As for the info abou the uniqueness of the Gladiator, thats impressive and I had no idea that was what set it apart from the rest.
#8
For you guys who aren't that into boats- one of the defining features of the Cig Gladiator is that it has no rubrail. It's my understanding that this is one of the main reasons for discontinuing the line- it adds so much expense to the build cost that Cig could no longer justify it.
That is a great looking Gladiator. Personally I wouldn't buy a 35'+ boat with no cabin.




