The Palm Beach Pontoons 200 Super LX SE Tri-Toon 2011 vs Palm Beach Pontoons 260 Deluxe Limited I/O 2005 comparison sits squarely in the category of decisions where specs alone won't tell the whole story — intended use, storage, and long-term ownership costs all factor in.
Size is the most obvious dividing line here. The Palm Beach Pontoons 260 Deluxe Limited I/O 2005 measures 27,0 feet overall (2005), giving it roughly 25,0 additional feet of deck space compared to the Palm Beach Pontoons 200 Super LX SE Tri-Toon 2011 at 2,0 feet (2011). Weight tells a clearer story for trailering families: the Palm Beach Pontoons 260 Deluxe Limited I/O 2005 tips the scales at 379 lbs — 205 lbs less than the Palm Beach Pontoons 200 Super LX SE Tri-Toon 2011 at 174 lbs. That difference is meaningful if you're working within a half-ton or three-quarter-ton truck's tow rating, especially once you factor in a motor, gear, and fuel.
The power gap is worth calling out. Rated to 135 hp, the Palm Beach Pontoons 200 Super LX SE Tri-Toon 2011 has a 130-hp advantage over the Palm Beach Pontoons 260 Deluxe Limited I/O 2005's 5-hp ceiling — enough to notice on acceleration and at cruising speed, particularly with a full passenger load.
For family outings this is probably the sharpest distinction between the two. The Palm Beach Pontoons 260 Deluxe Limited I/O 2005 is rated for 16 passengers, while the Palm Beach Pontoons 200 Super LX SE Tri-Toon 2011 caps at 11. If you're regularly pulling extended family or a group of friends onto the water, the extra seats on the Palm Beach Pontoons 260 Deluxe Limited I/O 2005 could be the deciding factor.
At this size, power-to-weight ratio matters more than outright horsepower. The Palm Beach Pontoons 200 Super LX SE Tri-Toon 2011 comes in at 1 lbs per hp versus 76 lbs per hp for the Palm Beach Pontoons 260 Deluxe Limited I/O 2005. The lower the ratio the more explosive the acceleration — meaningful on a short RIB where bursts of speed, quick planing, and agility in surf or tight waterways define the experience.
The Palm Beach Pontoons 260 Deluxe Limited I/O 2005 is an inflatable design — lighter, easier to store, and quicker to launch from a beach or dock without a slipway. The Palm Beach Pontoons 200 Super LX SE Tri-Toon 2011 is a rigid hull, which typically offers a more confident ride in chop and easier maintenance over the long term.
Bottom line: Choose the Palm Beach Pontoons 260 Deluxe Limited I/O 2005 if your priority is putting more people on the water — it handles 16 passengers and at 27,0 ft it has the deck room to back that rating up comfortably. The Palm Beach Pontoons 200 Super LX SE Tri-Toon 2011 is the smarter pick if you want a lighter, easier-to-trailer boat rated for 11 that costs less to run day-to-day.