A
Anonymous
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[ QUOTE ]
Personally, as it is march, I would guess that the owner will be putting the boat back in the water sooner rather than later, so it would have been dewinterised whether you had come along or not, i.e. an expense he would have incurred irrespective of your requirements.
[/ QUOTE ]I don't think you can assume (or have any right to assume) that at any time, but especially not when the boat is for sale. Best broker's advice for serious selling is to remove all clobber, thorough clean inside and out, and leave on the hard. That way you don't end up with pointless 'trial sails', and the purchaser can see the hull condition before even talking to the broker. You are also more likely to get an offer since the cost of survey will not include a haul out.
By the way, back to the OP's problem of high moisture - I have come to the conclusion that the quantitative tests and the interpretations are for the most part utter bunkum, with conventional testing methods. Different surveyors - all self-proclaimed experts in moisture in hulls, of course - all give different opinions and their opinions will be so covered with caveats that you might as well ask the nearest barmaid. The yacht in question was very possibly sound - the same cannot be said of the surveyor who professed not to know how the hull got wet /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif
Personally, as it is march, I would guess that the owner will be putting the boat back in the water sooner rather than later, so it would have been dewinterised whether you had come along or not, i.e. an expense he would have incurred irrespective of your requirements.
[/ QUOTE ]I don't think you can assume (or have any right to assume) that at any time, but especially not when the boat is for sale. Best broker's advice for serious selling is to remove all clobber, thorough clean inside and out, and leave on the hard. That way you don't end up with pointless 'trial sails', and the purchaser can see the hull condition before even talking to the broker. You are also more likely to get an offer since the cost of survey will not include a haul out.
By the way, back to the OP's problem of high moisture - I have come to the conclusion that the quantitative tests and the interpretations are for the most part utter bunkum, with conventional testing methods. Different surveyors - all self-proclaimed experts in moisture in hulls, of course - all give different opinions and their opinions will be so covered with caveats that you might as well ask the nearest barmaid. The yacht in question was very possibly sound - the same cannot be said of the surveyor who professed not to know how the hull got wet /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif