Boat Test: 2024 Parker Offshore 2900 CC

Boat Test: 2024 Parker Offshore 2900 CC
Parker Offshore 2900 CC running in the river
Twin 300 hp Yamahas provide impressive performance.
Courtesy Parker Offshore

Overview

We’ve known Parker Boats for decades as no-nonsense, able, modified-V fishing and utility boats with sweet Carolina lines. The company began with Linwood Parker’s 25-foot Sou’wester open workboat in the early 1970s.

Fast-forward to 2019. Linwood and Trudy Parker sold the company to Correct Craft, which recognized the value of that dedicated local workforce and expanded the capabilities of the Beaufort plant while blending in its strong manufacturing traditions. The parent company also changed the name to Parker Offshore and continued to offer the classic 18- to 25-foot Special Edition (SE) line for inshore ­customers, while also heading into some new territory.

Newer deep-V models offer more family features while retaining the fundamental Parker DNA. Structural integrity is assured thanks to full inner hull liners bonded onto foam-filled composite stringer grids. The flagship is the 2900 CC, which we had an opportunity to shake out on the blustery open waters of the lower Chesapeake Bay. We came away feeling that Parker Offshore’s future is true to its heritage and bright.

Parker Offshore 2900 CC forward storage
There’s cavernous dry storage in front of the console.
Courtesy Parker Offshore

Interior and Accessories

The base 2900 CC comes with U-shaped bow seating and a ­double-wide lounge with armrests and cavernous dry storage in front of the console, including a large dry hold in the sole. Upholstery is now diamond-stitched, with upgraded foam material inside. The forward-facing seatbacks ($1,121) and a removable bow casting platform/sun pad with cushion ($1,814) are optional, as is a double-wide folding transom seat built on a sturdy, easy-folding frame ($2,095). Also optional is a fiberglass T-top with electronics box, courtesy lights, LED spreader lights, Wet Sounds speaker pods ($1,899 upgrade available), windshield, and four-rod powder-coated rocket ­launchers ($9,995). There’s a standard stainless-steel anchor chute, with a windlass and 300 feet of ­anchor rode optional ($2,270).

The helm seat offers folding bolsters. There’s also aft mezzanine seating with three tackle drawers inside (one converts to a trash can), plus a seatback that folds down to become a rigging table and tackle center with gear ­storage ($2,130). Underneath the seat lies an insulated cooler for drinks and food (or rigging for a backup livewell). The Marine Mat cockpit sole covering ($2,284) is easy on the feet.

Parker Offshore 2900 CC helm
The helm has space for a single 16-inch Garmin GPSMap 8616 XSV multifunction display and B60 transducer or a pair of 12-inch Garmin GPSMap 8612 XSV and B60.
Courtesy Parker Offshore

Inside the 2900 CC’s console, you’ll find a 5-foot-1-inch-high space for a portable flushing head with a macerator and dockside pump-out ($764). It also offers excellent access to the electronics inside the broad helm dashboard. (We’d like to see lighting and positive ventilation for the head, and maybe a full marine toilet with holding tank.) Outside, that dash provides space for electronics up to a single 16-inch Garmin GPSMap 8616 XSV ­multifunction display and B60 transducer, with VHF 115 and antenna ($11,910) or a pair of 12-inch Garmin GPSMap 8612 XSV and B60 with VHF 115 and antenna ($15,842), in addition to Yamaha’s Helm Master autopilot and joystick ($13,250). Options such as Garmin radar ($2,094 to $2,931) and SiriusXM weather ($1,351) are also available.

In addition to the optional folding seat, the full transom offers a 270-quart fish box, a transom door to starboard, and a 40-gallon livewell to port. The transom door leads to the outboard bracket’s full-width boarding/swim platform with a folding telescopic ladder. To port, immediately forward of the livewell, is a dive door with another telescoping ladder. Additional storage for fish or gear in the cockpit includes port and starboard 200-quart in-sole fish boxes with macerators. Parker offers a ­variety of fishing upgrades such as Gemlux outriggers and a rod-holder-mounted Docktail utility table. A bow-mounted electric positioning motor would be a dealer-installed option, integrated into the boat’s Yamaha/Garmin wiring harness. With all of the fishing features listed above, we’d like to see more factory rod holders and rod-storage options, though any Parker dealer with a good rigging shop should be able to customize the 2900 CC’s open layout for any individual owner’s angling needs. Adaptability has always been a Parker strength.

Parker Offshore 2900 CC cockpit seating
There’s aft mezzanine seating with three tackle drawers inside.
Courtesy Parker Offshore

The 2900 CC comes standard with trim tabs. We strongly recommend that ­owners learn to adjust running angles in varying ­conditions to cushion this boat’s ride. Think of the tabs and the engines’ trim especially to tailor fore-and-aft trim to existing conditions and side-to-side trim in windy conditions with quartering or beam seas and wind.

Parker Offshore 2900 CC aft seating
In addition to the optional folding seat, the full transom offers a 270-quart fish box.
Courtesy Parker Offshore

Engines

Performance with the twin 300 hp ­Yamahas proved impressive, especially the fuel efficiency. Top speed in breezy conditions maxed at 57 mph, but efficiency peaked at 27.25 mph, netting us better than 2 mpg. For comparison, we remember running a Boating sea trial back in the late 1990s of a 24-foot walkaround boat with a single, conventional 225 hp two-stroke V-6 outboard, both from major manufacturers. It cruised in the mid-20s and topped out around 40 mph. Its fuel-economy profile looked like the 2900 CC’s, with a much smaller, lighter hull and lower cruising and top speeds. Boats have come a long way! 

In the end, the Parker 2900 CC is a big, brawny, classic-looking Carolina center-­console with abundant family features, but plenty of strength to take on bluewater ­challenges as well.

Read Next: Parker 2200 CC

Parker Offshore 2900 CC heading out to fish
The 2900 CC offers abundant family features, and plenty of strength to take on bluewater challenges as well.
Courtesy Parker Offshore

How We Tested 

  • Engines: Twin 300 hp Yamaha V-6 outboards
  • Drive/Prop: Outboard/15″ x 20″ Saltwater Series II-SDS 3-blade stainless steel
  • Gear Ratio: 1.75:1 Fuel Load: 180 gal. Water Load: 0 gal. Crew Weight: 600 lb. 

High Points

  • There’s 5 feet, 1 inch of headroom, a marine toilet, and great access to electronics inside the console.
  • MarineMat atop the console cushions phones and glasses and helps hold them in place.
  • Versatile tackle center with work surface resides abaft the mezzanine seatback.
  • Excellent fuel efficiency for a boat of this size and power.

Low Points

  • Needs more rod-holder capacity.
  • How do you mount the windshield wiper?

Pricing and Specs

Price: $224,787 (base MSRP with test power)
LOA: 34’0″
Hull Length: 28’3″
Beam: 9’6″
Draft: 1’5″
Displacement: 7,500 lb.
Transom Deadrise: 21 degrees
Bridge Clearance: 8’6″ (hardtop, antennas down)
Max Headroom: 5’6″
Fuel Capacity: 191 gal.
Water Capacity: 10 gal.
Max Horsepower: 600
Available Power: Twin 250 or 300 hp Yamaha outboards

Speed, Efficiency, Operation

Parker Offshore 2900 CC performance data
Parker Offshore 2900 CC Certified Test Results
Boating Magazine

Parker Boats – Beaufort, North Carolina; parkerboats.com

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