

I then built another plastic board to mount the amps to and then mounted that board to the one on the side of the boat. I then rewired the system to move the amps to the side of the boat where I epoxied a board with stainless tee nuts. They were yellow LEDs so they looked great on the amps. Rather than put two more RF logos on the bridges, I added a Volt meter and a temp gauge for the highs amp that gets the hottest. I painted them yellow and sanded the faces to expose the aluminum edges. I pulled them out, spent 6 months chasing factory bridges and caps to form one long amplifier.

They were also different colors of gray/black. It had some older Rockford Fosgate amps that worked great, but were mounted in a way that took all of the storage room in the boat. Now that the cosmetics were in order I moved to the stereo. The satin black swallowed light and made the remaining yellow just pop off the boat. I also had the speaker box covered and added the logo as well. So I had it wrapped from the rail down the sides in satin black and had a nice version of the Centurion logo put on the side. So I gave it a makeover.įirst off I tinted the windshield to give some black to break up the yellow a bit. I love large systems and it had a lot of equipment, but it was getting tired and there was no storage. I don’t mind yellow as an accent color, but it was way too much for my tastes. My only issue was it was a yellow and white boat, and I mean yellow. It only had 270 hours on a 10 year old boat that had been stored in a garage it’s whole life.

I knew the boat well and knew he took great care of it mechanically. I purchased a 2002 Centurion from a good friend a couple of years ago.
