Scout 420 LXF Boats For Sale

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The Scout 420 LXF is the brand's flagship center console, a 42-foot fishing and entertaining platform built on an epoxy-fused, double-stepped hull that runs lighter and faster than single-step designs. Rigged with quad Mercury 350 Verado outboards, it reaches a top speed around 55 mph and sits comfortably in the low-to-mid 50s, with the stepped bottom and deep bow flare keeping the ride dry and flat. A Yamaha power package is also offered, bringing joystick steering as standard equipment. The boat suits a buyer who wants serious offshore fishing capability without giving up the finish of a luxury yacht, and used 2019 and 2020 examples turn up for sale regularly.

The helm seats three abreast on heated, bolstered chairs with fold-down armrests and a pop-down footrest for the captain. It comes standard with triple 15-inch Garmin displays, with 19-inch screens available as an option, all networked so any screen can show the chart, sonar, 48-mile radar, engine telemetry, fuel-burn rates, or stereo controls. Mercury's outboard joystick docking system integrates autopilot, heading hold, course hold and Skyhook station-keeping, and a bow thruster can be added. CZone digital switching runs the electrical loads, and a keychain key fob powers the battery switches and lighting up or down so you never have to climb into the console.

A Seakeeper gyro stabilizer is a signature option, with the factory fitting the compact Seakeeper 5 (a roughly 900-pound unit with a 500-pound flywheel spinning at 12,000 RPM) tied directly into the stringer system to hold the boat steady at troll, on the drift over a reef, and at speed. One of the boat's defining features is the powered beach platform that folds out of the hull side into a teak swim step with its own ladder, paired with a powered boarding door. Up top, the hardtop carries five electronically flip-down rod holders, a powered Sureshade that covers the cockpit, FLIR thermal imaging, a spotlight, KVH satellite TV, carbon-fiber Rupp outriggers, and an auto-retracting freshwater washdown reel, with built-in stairs and a forward door for clearing bridges.

The cockpit is built to fish and to host. The transom has a fold-out seat, twin live wells, a large macerated kill box stretching roughly six feet, in-floor fish boxes port and starboard, and a wide transom walkthrough with a lift-up and fold-out gate. Aft seating lifts to reveal a full systems room. A Brownie's Third Lung hookah dive system with 130 feet of line and up to three branches is available for diving without tanks. Galley features behind the helm include a stainless icemaker, a refrigerator with a top freezer, a wet bar sink, and an optional electric grill. The bow carries a double lounger with a high-low table that drops to floor level or rises to dining height, dive-tank storage, JL Audio speakers, and glove boxes with USB charging.

Belowdecks the 420 LXF offers a full cabin with the feel of a finished home. The forward seating and high-low table convert to a berth roughly the size of a king bed, set beneath a flat-screen TV with a soundbar and opening side windows. The galley includes a convection microwave, a two-burner cooktop, a stainless drawer refrigerator, a sink, and dedicated wine-glass storage. The head holds a vanity, an electric vacuum-flush toilet, a stone floor, and a separate stall shower with teak accents and headroom near six foot five. Interiors can be ordered in the Brea Cayenne ultra-touch vinyl. Notable options to weigh when buying include the Seakeeper, color-matched engines, underwater lights, heated seats, and the upgraded 19-inch Garmin helm; a well-loaded 2019 example has been listed at an asking price of $799,000.



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