How do you spend $3000 on a 650SX that doesn't need an engine rebuild and all the electronics work ?
I spent $2000 and this ski looks like I got lucky ... I opened the e-box and it's dry as a bone. I have not checked the stator yet. I think with some parts and elbow grease I'll be in this ski for under $3000.
That said, I really don't care what this project ends up costing me. The first ski I ever rode was a late 1970s Kawasaki JS440 ... I was 10 years old. My best friend got a Kawasaki X2 the first year they were out ... I lived "down the shore" in an area where we had rivers on one side and the ocean on the other. My childhood memories are filled with sunrises on the beach, and endless summer days in the ocean jumping waves.
In 1990 I bought an 80s 550 and named it "Splinter". I stripped the hull, painted it Velocity Yellow, glued some purple mats, and set it up for ocean riding. I rebuilt the top end and installed West Coast everything which was readily available back then. In 1994 my girlfriend bought a Yamaha SuperJet and soon after I bought the 1995 Kawasaki 550sx. My girlfriend was obsessed with IJSBA racing, Chris the Fish, and I had a thing for Christy Carlson ... We spent all our free time racing each other, trading paint round buoys, and pretending we were pro racers. I remember sleeping on the beach and leaving only to buy fuel and food. I was known for getting pulled out of the Atlantic by the State Police on double red flag days, and we learned to ride 2-up on a SuperJet ... Kim would wedge herself at the front of the tray and I would drag myself and get us going. We were the only could I ever encountered that rode 2-up. Time marched on, I got married, and children came ... last memory of skiing I hauled our boats from NJ to Maine - Eagle Lake - for a family vacation.
So... for me, this Jet Ski is an old friend. It's something that's deeply embedded in my DNA and the same as salt water and sand. I think I've reached a point in my life where I can say I've spent more time on the tray of a stand-up ski than most of you hear, and that learning curve, I experienced from 1980 through 1990. I do not care what this project costs. I only care that I am able to still remember the sounds, smells, and sensations of riding a jet ski so vividly that it feels like yesterday. I'm not as fast, or agile, but I can still stand.