Intermountain Specialties Ltd

Intermountain Specialties Ltd Jet Boat parts specialists;Dealer for Hamilton;American Turbine;Mercury;Kodiak etc. Industrial equipment and forklift sales and rentals;Industrial warehousing.

Mini storage in Sparwood and Fernie locations. Towing and transport services

Thank you to SSS Engineering in New Zealand for this information;The 212/214 Jet is over 30 years old now with over 12,0...
05/07/2026

Thank you to SSS Engineering in New Zealand for this information;The 212/214 Jet is over 30 years old now with over 12,000 units out there...which shows what a good design it is;but even the best design needs to be serviced properly.
A lesson to learn here .
When you put your 212 blade back onto the shaft,
It should be a gentle non obstructed fit .
If you feel resistance . On the shaft !keyway or anything, Don’t just smash it on
Clean the burrs. Clean the burs again
Wipe all the s**t off the shaft and inside the
Blade , including sand
All the l**e in the world didn’t save this shaft
Motor out , pump out , remove bearing off shaft
Shaft out of pump backwards
Cut sleeve off , clean hideous galling on shaft in lathe . Then press off blade
The hard way to do a blade rebuild

Interesting article on Hamilton Jet's new manufacturing facility .....written for the workboat showMore than 60 years af...
03/25/2026

Interesting article on Hamilton Jet's new manufacturing facility .....written for the workboat show
More than 60 years after Sir William “Bill” Hamilton’s jetboats clawed their way up the Colorado River, the company that built them faces a new challenge: scaling to meet rising demand for commercial and military waterjets.

In October, HamiltonJet welcomed hundreds of its employees and its network of global distributors to its Christchurch, New Zealand, headquarters for the official opening of its new factory, a facility designed to give the storied waterjets manufacturer room to grow.

Managing Director Ben Reed said the state-of-the-art facility positions HamiltonJet to increase production in line with rising demand. “We’re at an output level today that is about our maximum on the large jet line,” he said. “And I can see more business coming… anywhere between 30% more and double in the next four or five years.”

The new 80,000-sq.-ft. facility is still ramping toward full operation. Today it offers a 40% increase in capacity over HamiltonJet’s existing production levels, with room to expand to nearly double that if the company one day adopts around-the-clock shifts.

The expansion marks what Reed described as “a turning point.” But getting to that moment took more than a decade of strategic planning, several pivots, and a steady commitment to quality, innovation, and a particular kind of corporate independence.

BUILDING UP
Reed joined HamiltonJet in 2013 to lead new product development. He took over as general manager in 2016 and became managing director in 2020. When he took the helm, the company was exploring a full relocation to a new site. Land had been purchased under Reed’s predecessor, but the company had not yet hit go on the expansion.

After a year and a half of analysis, the answer became clear, Reed said: a total move didn’t make financial sense. The company already had room to grow on its existing property — more than enough, it turned out.

“Why are we moving and losing all the factory space we’ve already got?” he recalled asking. The company reversed course, sold the new parcel for a profit, and reinvested in its original footprint, constructing a new factory next to its existing one.

The final push to build came when a surge in post-Covid government spending temporarily jammed the production schedule, pushing lead times to as long as 18 months. “It taught us the lesson that we needed to do it,” Reed said.

Staffing the new plant will require HamiltonJet to increase its factory workforce by about 30 people from the current 200, and that number is expected to continue rising in the years ahead if all goes according to plan.

The company will also construct new offices for its corporate and engineering staff, which account for another 200 employees in Christchurch. In total, HamiltonJet employs 465, including 65 outside of New Zealand.

LEAN PRODUCTION
HamiltonJet has long operated on what Reed described as a highly refined, “batch-of-one,” “made-to-order” manufacturing system.

Reed, a mechanical engineer, is an expert in lean production, having implemented it at Ford Motor Co. and Caterpillar before joining HamiltonJet. “I’ve got this thing running through me that I love the concepts and processes of lean,” he said.

The approach, which is rare for a manufacturer handling such a variety, allows the company to produce almost any model in any sequence without stockpiling parts. HamiltonJet produces several series of waterjets, including the HJ, HM, HT, HTX, HJX, and LTX series, offering more than 20 different models across these ranges, from smaller units up to powerful jets for large vessels, covering a power spectrum from 150 kW to 5,500 kW.

“I came to HamiltonJet, and I looked at [its lean production model], and I went, ‘Oh my God, this is so clever,’” Reed said. “It could be a case study for somebody in the manufacturing industry.”

The new facility, which will help the company boost its large-jet output in particular, extends that system by “straightening the flow,” aligning casting, machining, painting, and assembly into a single, coherent line that is expected to unlock new levels of efficiency, Reed said.

HERITAGE
HamiltonJet’s origins are well known in New Zealand, and in the world of marine jet propulsion, the Hamilton name is ubiquitous. But the company didn’t get its start in the waterjet business.

Kiwi engineer and inventor Bill Hamilton founded CWF Hamilton & Co. Ltd. in 1939 to build earthmoving equipment and heavy machinery. He brought an engineer’s pragmatism and an explorer’s drive, constantly pushing both his innovations and himself into uncharted territory.

In the 1950s, Hamilton set out to build a boat that could navigate the fast-flowing Waitaki River, waters too shallow for propeller-driven craft, whose props struck the riverbed. The concept was proven in dramatic fashion in 1960, when three Hamilton jetboats became the first — and still the only — to travel up the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon.

Hamilton went on to pioneer the modern waterjet, setting the company on a trajectory to become the world’s leading producer of the technology. Today, HamiltonJet officials estimate that the company holds approximately 40% of the world’s waterjet market share, delivering jets to a wide range of commercial and military vessels, from whale-watch boats and ferries to workboats, crewboats, and advanced military patrol ships.

All HamiltonJet waterjets are manufactured in Christchurch, with more than 97% bound for export. The United States is the company’s largest market, accounting for about 20% of revenue. Notable recent examples of U.S. vessels equipped with Hamilton jets include the Breaux’s Bay Craft-built pilot boats San Jacinto and Juan Seguin — 2025 winners of WorkBoat’s Significant Boat award — as well as the latest ferries built by Mavrik Marine for San Francisco Bay Ferry and Golden Gate Ferry, a new diesel-electric patrol boat being built by Moose Boats for Seattle’s King County, and the Mark VI patrol boats built by SAFE Boats International for the U.S. Navy.

Over the past 10 years, the company has invested heavily in technology development, introducing more robust waterjets that deliver efficiency gains up to 7%. It has also focused on electrification, autonomy, and digitization, including the AVX and AVXexpress electronic controls; autonomy products such as the JETanchor positioning system, JETlink autonomous and remote-control solution, and the JETfighter firefighting control interface; as well as the Overwatch remote monitoring tool.

Internally, despite decades of international growth, the company’s culture still reflects the values of its founder and the family that continues to own it: innovation, quality, and self-reliance. Bill’s grandson, Mike Hamilton, serves as chairman of the board, and Mike’s son, Sam Hamilton, is both a board member and part of the engineering team.

Reed said the new factory was built entirely from retained earnings. “We have not borrowed a cent on it,” he said.

The quality-first philosophy extends to customer support. Reed recalled a Hinckley yacht with recurring jet bearing failures. When engineers discovered a machining error in the original housing, HamiltonJet replaced the entire unit. “We replaced the jet. It’s 19 years old,” Reed said. “If we’ve done something wrong, we’ll fix it.”

This approach is now formalized in HamiltonJet’s newly expanded three-year warranty, which he contrasted with competitors’ more restrictive terms: “Ours is just anything that goes wrong — we’re going to fix it, if we think it’s our problem.”

STAYING CONNECTED
As HamiltonJet prepares to scale further, Reed said preserving a people-centric culture is a priority, emphasizing visibility, communication, and employee empowerment. “I’m a stand-at-the-front, at-the-right-moment leader,” he said. “You’ve got to let people do their job. It might be trite to say, ‘You need to hire good people and then get out of their way,’ but that’s absolutely true.”

The mindset carries over to how Reed approaches building the HamiltonJet workforce. “I have a philosophy that you only hire crackerjacks,” he said. “You don’t always know when you hire somebody… But every individual you’re going to bring into the company needs to be fantastic. I definitely push that with my team.”

Even as managing director, Reed said he meets with every new hire. He also writes a weekly internal newsletter, a practice that began during New Zealand’s Covid lockdowns. “I missed one in five years,” he said.

Reed, who spends roughly a quarter of each year on the road, said it’s just as important to stay connected with customers. “Our customer base buys off relationship as much as product,” he said. “They need to trust the people they’re doing business with.”

HamiltonJet leans on its regional offices in Seattle, London, and Singapore, along with a network of 53 distributors, to stay close to customers and remain ready for market shifts, according to Andy Wyatt, global sales support manager. “It’s a push-pull feedback, constant communication with the network,” he said.

Wyatt said that some markets around the world, such as the passenger vessel market in the U.S. Pacific Northwest, are generally steady, providing a predictable baseline for production. Beyond that, maintaining constant dialogue is essential for adjusting factory workflows as needed.

“Fifteen years ago, our single biggest market was offshore oil and gas. Now it’s one of the smallest,” Wyatt said. “A few years ago, we were really hot on offshore wind. That is a certain size of vessel, so it tends to drive [demand for] a certain size of jet. There’s a big focus at the moment on patrol and military, and again, that’s tending to equate to a certain size of jet. So, we’re able to prepare and adjust for what’s going to be going through the factory.”

FOLLOWING THE SIGNALS
Asked where the biggest market opportunities lie, Reed didn’t hesitate: defense.

He added that HamiltonJet has been growing at about 11% annually over the past seven years, a trend that is expected to continue as governments spend further to bolster their defense capabilities. Demand for large fleets of uncrewed surface vessels in the U.S., for example, appears especially promising.

“It is downright obvious at the moment that defense spending across the globe is going up by about double,” he said, pointing to U.S. procurement changes and major increases in the U.K., Australia, New Zealand, and NATO countries.

Defense work already accounts for roughly half of HamiltonJet’s business — including police and quasi-military applications. If overall defense volume rises significantly as anticipated, Reed said, the company “will need every bit of the additional capacity now coming online” in its new factory.

HamiltonJet is particularly well-positioned for the U.S. Navy’s Modular Attack Surface Craft program, having supplied jets for all three prototype Medium Unmanned Surface Vessel boats that recently completed autonomous transits between the U.S. and Australia.

Reed believes autonomy is changing defense procurement timelines. “Military has two speeds: glacially slow and canceled,” he said. “But if you take people off the boat, you don’t have to meet a thousand-page specification. You can build much quicker.”

2026 World ChampionshipsBelow is the updated schedule: USA World Jet River Race 2026 - IDAHOThursday, May 7th – Location...
03/15/2026

2026 World Championships

Below is the updated schedule:
USA World Jet River Race 2026 - IDAHO
Thursday, May 7th – Location: Emmett, Idaho
• Capsule Training / Pre- Running
• Race team introduction meeting. Registration & Tech inspections.
Friday, May 8th – Location: Emmett, Idaho
• 9AM MST- Time Trials
• Test and Tune Day
• Registration & Tech inspections. Opening Ceremony.
Saturday May 9th – Location: Emmett, ID (PAYETTE RIVER)
• 9AM MST- Race from Black Canyon Reservoir to Horseshoe Bend. (Leg 1 Up)
• 11AM MST- Race from Horseshoe Bend to Black Canyon Reservoir. (Leg 2 Down)
• 2PM MST- Race from Black Canyon Reservoir to Horseshoe Bend. (Leg 3 Up)
• 4PM MST- Race from Horseshoe Bend to Black Canyon Reservoir. (Leg 4 Down)
• After race Drivers /Navigator meet and greet at Emmett, ID. Location TBD.
Sunday May 10th – Location: Emmett, ID (PAYETTE RIVER)
• 9AM MST - Race from Black Canyon Reservoir to Horseshoe Bend (Leg 1 Up)
• 11AM MST - Race from Horseshoe Bend to Black Canyon Reservoir. (Leg 2 Down)
Monday May 11th- Location: Riggins/Whitebird, Idaho (SALMON RIVER)
• Travel day / Pre- running
• 4-7PM PST - Boat Show & Shine in Whitebird.
Tuesday May 12th – Location: Whitebird, Idaho (SALMON RIVER)
• 9AM PST - Race from Hammer Creek (Whitebird) to Lucille. (Leg 1 Up)
• 11AM PST - Race from Lucille to Hammer Creek (Whitebird). (Leg 2 Down)
• 2PM PST - Race from Hammer Creek (Whitebird) to Lucille. (Leg 1 Up)
• 4PM PST - Race from Lucille to Hammer Creek (Whitebird). (Leg 2 Down)
Wednesday May 13th – Location: Lewiston, ID (SNAKE RIVER)
• Travel Day / Pre – Running
Thursday May 14th- Location: Lewiston, ID (SNAKE RIVER)
• 9:15AM PST - Race from Hells Gate Marina to Bear Bar (Leg 1 UP)
• 11:15AM PST - Race from Bear Bar to Hells Gate Marina (Leg 2 Down)
• 1:30PM PST – Circuit Racing
Friday May 15th- Location: St. Maries, ID
• Travel Day / Pre-Running
• 6PM – 8PM PST - Boat Show and Shine in St. Maries.
Saturday May 16th- Location: St. Maries, ID (JOE RIVER)
• 9AM PST - Race from St. Maries to Calder (Leg 1 Up)
• 11AM PST - Race from Calder to St. Maries (Leg 2 Down)
• 2PM PST - Race from St. Maries to Calder (Leg 3 Up)
• 4PM PST - Race from Calder to St. Maries (Leg 4 Down)
Sunday May 17th – Location: St. Maries, ID (JOE RIVER)
• 9AM PST - Race from St. Maries to Calder (Leg 1 Up)
• 11AM PST - Race from Calder to St. Maries (Leg 2 Down)
• Closing Ceremony & Awards
*Tentative Agenda / Some locations may change based on water conditions, etc.

Canadian River Jet Boat Schedule2026 Race Schedule:📍 Peace River, AB — June 19–21📍 Taylor, BC — June 26–28📍 Grande Prair...
03/15/2026

Canadian River Jet Boat Schedule
2026 Race Schedule:
📍 Peace River, AB — June 19–21
📍 Taylor, BC — June 26–28
📍 Grande Prairie, AB — July 24–26
📍 Whitecourt, AB — July 31 – August 2

We are stocking the new 452 HP LQ9 6 liter base engine for the FX race class;This LS motor comes with the LS6 camshaft a...
02/23/2026

We are stocking the new 452 HP LQ9 6 liter base engine for the FX race class;This LS motor comes with the LS6 camshaft and LS3 heads and an iron block and cross bolted main caps for durability.Current price is $9000.00 cdn

01/09/2026

The Feds have added more rules and costs to jet boat ownership...and hired more employees to track boat owners;for BC owners they also share information with the PST department.
The only good news is they are charging sailboat owners as well(who usually vote Liberal)
Recent changes:

· all new, transferred and renewed Pleasure Craft Licences are valid for 5 years

· licences without an expiry date now have an expiry date

· a $24 fee to apply for a new, renewed, transferred or duplicate Pleasure Craft Licence

· you must update your licence information within 30 days

· starting December 31, 2027, wind-powered pleasure craft over 6 metres long will need a Pleasure Craft Licence

A Pleasure Craft Licence (PCL) is a document with a unique number. It must be displayed on both sides of the bow (front) of a pleasure craft. Like a car’s licence plate, it is used for identification but is not proof of ownership. It helps police and search and rescue find important information during emergencies.

In Canada, if you are using your pleasure craft for recreation, it needs a Pleasure Craft Licence if it meets both of the following criteria:

has one or more engines totalling at least 10 horsepower (7.5 kW), even temporarily
is principally operated and maintained in Canadian waters
Your pleasure craft doesn’t need a licence if it is registered in Canada. It needs to be registered if you:

want a name for your pleasure craft
need to register a marine mortgage with Transport Canada

You may be fined $250 if your pleasure craft doesn’t have a valid licence.

Send a message to learn more

We have a used Kodiak 350 EFI available....came out of a boat that sunk in freshwater...drained and oil changed...cranks...
12/07/2025

We have a used Kodiak 350 EFI available....came out of a boat that sunk in freshwater...drained and oil changed...cranks over but will not run....problem with the electronics;includes everything in picture except cone and driveshaft(we are using that on the new 5.3 that is going in the boat.)$5000.00 cdn plus tax.

We lost one of the pioneers of performance boats last week......Bob Leach of Eliminator Boats.Founder and owner of Elimi...
12/02/2025

We lost one of the pioneers of performance boats last week......Bob Leach of Eliminator Boats.Founder and owner of Eliminator Boats for 50 years his boats set the standard for the California style race and pleasure boats...many of which were jet drive.In the early days of river jet racing Eliminator (and copies of their designs) were a popular choice and some of their design ideas were incorporated into the aluminum boats that took over the river jet boat market.

The Payette River Race will be running again next spring in southern Idaho;This was always a great race for competitors ...
10/26/2025

The Payette River Race will be running again next spring in southern Idaho;This was always a great race for competitors and spectators as the river is challenging and the road follows the river so it is easy to access.
THE REBIRTH OF PAYETTE RIVER JET BOAT RACING:
On May 9th and 10th for the first time in 32 years the Payette River will “roar” to life as the starting legs of the 2026 World Championship Jet Boat Race. The racecourse will be a 25-mile run starting at Triangle Park, located at Black Canyon Reservoir. The start will direct the boats west (downstream) on the reservoir about 3 miles to a turnaround buoy, located in the vicinity of Black Canyon Park. After rounding the buoy, the boats will head east (upstream) past Triangle Park and upriver to the HWY 55 bridge, located at the south end of Horseshoe Bend. The racers will then re-stage to head back through the course downstream to the turn around buoy and back to Triangle Park, both Saturday May 9th & Sunday May 10th. There will be two round trips each day. This will enable the spectators and fans to see up to 50 boats roar past them 4 times per day! This course is different than the course of the last Jet Boat Race back in 1993, when we raced from Black Canyon reservoir upstream about 30 miles to Gardena and back. Because of a hydro electric project located at Horseshoe Bend, we are now forced to end upriver legs at Horseshoe Bend. Racers prepare for braided sand flats at the top end of Black Canyon Reservoir followed by a 15-mile stretch of free-flowing river with light to moderate rock hazards occasionally. Fans prepare to see boats cover these 25-mile legs in less than 15 minutes!

Mercury has discontinued the pre 2010 Sport Jet 200 long blocks....serial   below OE435741...they are no longer availabl...
09/10/2025

Mercury has discontinued the pre 2010 Sport Jet 200 long blocks....serial below OE435741...they are no longer available.The 3 star long blocks...serial and up are now "pending no longer available ( PNLA)"in the Mercury parts computer...this usually means that when existing stock is sold they will not build any more;We have a fall booking special on the 3 star long blocks at $11,000.00 cdn until Sept 29th.We also have a few new 200/240 pumps available...these are no longer available from Mercury.If you have a 2010 or newer boat with a 200 Sport Jet that you plan on keeping it would be a good idea to pick up a spare long block while they are still available.

Address

707 Douglas Fir Road
Fernie, BC
V0B2G0

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