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I bought my first Checkmate in 1974 after reading a review of the MX-15 in PowerBoat Magazine. I ordered it from the closest Checkmate dealer to me (in Irving, Texas, a suburb of Dallas) and paid $1450.00 for it with the trailer. It was blue with silver metalflake and I ordered it with just two (2) black bucket seats and no windshield.


I bought the MX-15 as a 'ski' boat, so I bought a long-shaft 125 HP Mercury and installed it with dual Ride-Guide steering. Jack plates were not a common item in 1974, so I simply put a 1" solid aluminum riser bar on top of the transom.

I mounted a 12 gallon spun-aluminum 'Moon' tank in the rear on brackets bolted to the transom. I mounted the tach in an aluminum housing on the front deck for clear visibility. Mercury also made a louvered cowling for the inline 6 cylinder powerheads that I thought looked cool...so I bought one.



My MX-15 was not terribly fast by today's standards, but it was a very fast 'ski' boat in 1974. The only outboards in the area running faster than my MX-15 (even the tunnel hulls) were using short-shaft Mercury motors, and those were few and far between. I trailered my MX-15 to Austin to see how fast it would run (the SDBA held drag boat races on Town Lake in those days). It was timed at 66 mph. While Corky Callahan was consistently running 80 mph in a 14 foot hull and short-shaft motor, I was pleased with my 'ski' boat.




I kept my MX-15 for two (2) years and then sold it to a friend. I have nothing but fond memories of my Checkmate MX-15!
Then I bought a V-Mate I. More on that in another post...


I bought the MX-15 as a 'ski' boat, so I bought a long-shaft 125 HP Mercury and installed it with dual Ride-Guide steering. Jack plates were not a common item in 1974, so I simply put a 1" solid aluminum riser bar on top of the transom.

I mounted a 12 gallon spun-aluminum 'Moon' tank in the rear on brackets bolted to the transom. I mounted the tach in an aluminum housing on the front deck for clear visibility. Mercury also made a louvered cowling for the inline 6 cylinder powerheads that I thought looked cool...so I bought one.



My MX-15 was not terribly fast by today's standards, but it was a very fast 'ski' boat in 1974. The only outboards in the area running faster than my MX-15 (even the tunnel hulls) were using short-shaft Mercury motors, and those were few and far between. I trailered my MX-15 to Austin to see how fast it would run (the SDBA held drag boat races on Town Lake in those days). It was timed at 66 mph. While Corky Callahan was consistently running 80 mph in a 14 foot hull and short-shaft motor, I was pleased with my 'ski' boat.




I kept my MX-15 for two (2) years and then sold it to a friend. I have nothing but fond memories of my Checkmate MX-15!
Then I bought a V-Mate I. More on that in another post...