Custom Carolina
SeaTek 36 Custom Express
36' / 10.97m

Ocean City , Maryland , United States
Kemosabe
The SeaTek 36 is a Jersey built boat with Carolina style.
Flag of Registry: United States
Saltwater Fishing
Power
Used
Diesel
Fiberglass Hull
HIN/IMO: VNW36122C708
Vessel ID# 2794441
$309,000 USD
€286,921 Euros
CA$417,176 CAD
£248,867 GBP
Description

The SeaTek 36 is a Jersey built boat with Carolina style. She'll get you out to the canyons and back quickly and efficiently with her twin 500hp Cummins QSC 8.3's. She packs A LOT of fishing features into a compact package. Great storage, fishboxes, electronics, oversize cooler, overhead rod storage, new teaser reels, and a large, comfortable cabin with plenty of headroom. The SeaTek 36 first was built as the SeaView 36 and then morphed into the OutIsland 38 by stretching it two feet. She's got an easy 26.5 knot cruise at 2300 rpms and tops out around 32 at a WOT of 2650. Recent maintenance and upgrades are listed below. Easy to see in Ocean City, MD.

Data Sheet
LOA 36' (11 meters)
Type power
Year 2008
Beam 14'
Draft Max 3'
Fuel Type Diesel
Hull Material Fiberglass
Engines

Engine 1

I D 130460
Engine Make Cummins
Engine Model 6QSC 8.3
Engine Type Inboard
Drive Type Direct
Power HP 500.00
Power KW 372.85
Fuel Type Diesel
Hours 849.00
Engine Location Port

Engine 2

I D 130461
Engine Make Cummins
Engine Model 6QSC 8.3
Engine Type Inboard
Drive Type Direct
Power HP 500.00
Power KW 372.85
Fuel Type Diesel
Hours 849.00
Engine Location Starboard

CONTACT US

For more information about this vessel, please contact Scott MacDonald.
We look forward to working with you!

Want more information?

Scott MacDonald

Sales Professional
750 Boucher Avenue
Suite 205
Annapolis Maryland 21403 United States
Cell: 1-703-307-5900

Scott MacDonald brings a lifetime of boating experience, plus a passion for fishing to our Grasonville office at Mears Point North Marina in Kent Narrows Maryland. He loves to fish whether it’s chasing native brook trout in Vermont, enticing pickerel out of the weed beds, watching smallmouth hammer a topwater bait with early morning mist on the water or seeing a blue marlin slam a marlin magic lure on a long center rigger.  He’s been offshore enough to have the scars but never seems to get enough of that endless blue water.