steve yates
Well-Known Member
deleted, you just answered the question I was going to ask as I was typing it.
Absolutely agree. I bought Concerto for £21,5000 in Dec 2013 and originally budgeted £12,000 to renovate Concerto. This will shortly reach £28,000 - but this does include plenty of upgrades that did not all need to be done. Nothing has been allowed for all the hours I have spent working on Concerto, which I have enjoyed doing.
Both Concerto and a new boat would have been able to sail to exactly the same places. A new boat would have had virtually no wortk to do it and it would have meant a slightly better living accomodation, but with slightly less comfort sailing wise. Concerto, being a Westerly Fulmar, is one of the top three GRP classic yachts (the others in my opinion are the Twister and Contessa 32). The Fulmar is known for its beautiful sailing qualities and I can vouch it is one of the most vice free yachts I have ever sailed and I have sailed a huge number of different boats.You did well. ?
The tired old stuff: "It's not worth it - you wont get your money back" Presupposes that there is some magical way of owning a boat that does not involve both capital depreciation and running costs.
The second shibboleth is that your 150k would have bought you a "better" boat. It would simply have bought you a different one.
but I have a boat exactly as I want it with lots of new equipment rather than equipment that could be 40 years old. I can honestly say I am enjoying my boat ......
I agree with you about getting some one else to do the work, but Concerto will not be for sale for at least another 10 to 15 years, when I will be in my early 80's. Concerto suits me fine and all the work is for my benefit. Next year I am planning to sail up the east coast and then stop and look round when I reach the Shetlands and then work my was down the other side. The trip is planned to be 5 months. Then in 4 to 5 years time I shall be moving from Kent to Cheshire, then Concerto will be based in N Wales. One trip will be round Ireland and the west coast of Scotland will be my regular cruising ground. I expect to maintain Concerto to the same standard during my custodianship and will make her very easy to sell in the future.That's a dangerous time! A couple of times in my life, I have worked to upgrade boats and get hem just how I want them. I then find I then have an overwhelming urge to sell them and start again with a new project. Of course that is crazy - in fact my advice to 2nd hand boat buyers is to take advantage of mugs like me and find something that someone else has paid to upgrade. It's not unusual to find a boat for sale for £20,000 on which £20,000 has been spent in the past 5 years.
Not so. All the Dubois designed boats had half skeg rudders and P brackets. The Conway and its contemporaries (33,Discus) were Giles designs with traditional shaft logsDoesn’t sound like a Corsair nor a Conway. Could be an (Angus Primrose) Moody 36? One of the only British boats of that era/size with a skeg-hung rudder and a p-bracket.
The Fulmar has a balanced rudder with a very small skeg. All the Laurent Giles designs have a knuckle running along the topsides of the bow, but the Ed Dubois have smooth topsides like the Fulmar.Not so. All the Dubois designed boats had half skeg rudders and P brackets. The Conway and its contemporaries (33,Discus) were Giles designs with traditional shaft logs

Sorry, I meant ‘full skeg’-hung, as per the OP:Not so. All the Dubois designed boats had half skeg rudders and P brackets. The Conway and its contemporaries (33,Discus) were Giles designs with traditional shaft logs
The skeg in the pictures runs the full length of the rudder
Agreed, certainly a Moody 36. Like the Tardis, huge inside!It is indeed. The Moody "primrose" on the bow gives it away. Probably a 36
Ask the Moody Owners Association. You don’t need to be a member.Thanks all! Perhaps I should change the title of this thread. I am still very hesitant about taking this on, it's nothing like the boat I had in mind, but it's a lot of boat for the money and at 1st glance I don't see any fundamental problems. But then at 1st glance I didn't even know what it wasI'll do some reading and go see it again at the weekend. Any gotchas for Moody's! Are the decks cored or solid ?
Very soundly built, but the interiors are perhaps less good and many have not aged well, and probably not as good as the Westerly when new. Very popular for liveaboards because of the space available. They have been at bargain basement prices for some time because of the cost of bringing well used examples up to standard.Thanks all! Perhaps I should change the title of this thread. I am still very hesitant about taking this on, it's nothing like the boat I had in mind, but it's a lot of boat for the money and at 1st glance I don't see any fundamental problems. But then at 1st glance I didn't even know what it wasI'll do some reading and go see it again at the weekend. Any gotchas for Moody's! Are the decks cored or solid ?
Decks will almost certainly be cored (although am less familiar with Marine Projects’ Moody mouldings). But very solid boats as others have said and a development on a successful and proven hull design. What other boat offers a ‘bathtub’ to lounge (or shelter!) in around the anchor locker?!Thanks all! Perhaps I should change the title of this thread. I am still very hesitant about taking this on, it's nothing like the boat I had in mind, but it's a lot of boat for the money and at 1st glance I don't see any fundamental problems. But then at 1st glance I didn't even know what it wasI'll do some reading and go see it again at the weekend. Any gotchas for Moody's! Are the decks cored or solid ?