adey
Well-Known Member
I guess I see ex charter boats in the same light as ex rental cars. 
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If I was looking at a high hours, ex charter boat it would need to be a lot cheaper than a similar 'normal' boat.
+1
There is a major plus of chartered boats and also a major minus. The plus is, if managed well, there is a continious reporting of failures of the boat and there is an efficient repair team behind the curtains. So there is a continious effort to keep the boat tip top. The minus is, the boat arrives at 5pm on Friday and will leave at 2 pm next day. There is very limited time to solve problems. Lets say a new windlass is needed. The installed one is 1700 watts but the only one left at the local dealer is 1400 watts. They buy the 1400 watt one and let it go. Or if Lewmar is EUR 2000 and Quick is EUR 1600, they buy the cheap one. After a couple of years of chartering and similar stories, the boat is full of cheap or non-genuine replacements, quickly but not properly covered problems. Of course there can be exclusions, but this is usually the picture in the commercial chartering world. Therefore, yes, a chartered boat should be considerably cheaper than non-chartered boats.
I'd buy the quick one for my non charter boat....
Whereas private owners never go for the cheaper option?
Good luck with that theory.
Sorry, but that still strikes me as a weird, and more formal than objective criteria.I claim that, yes, chartered boats should be paid lower than non-chartered ones, unless the seller strongly proves that the boat was kept in very good condition.
Weird, formal or whatever, you can tell whether a boat has been regularly chartered the minute you step on to it because all the soft furnishings and woodwork will look well used and thats something even a good skipper and crew can do nothing about. Similarly all the domestic equipment such as fridges, TVs, lighting, freshwater and toilet systems will be equally well used. Bringing all that lot up to a good standard is going to cost a lot of money. Perversely, the mechanical systems are probably going to be the least of your problems because they will have probably benefited from the regular useSorry, but that still strikes me as a weird, and more formal than objective criteria.
Well yes if an ex charter boat gets a massive refit, then of course it becomes an attractive proposition but the fact that most dont and are simply put on the market in their existing ex charter condition probably says that for most boats the cost of a refit exceeds the uplift in valueWell, fwiw I've seen a couple of ex-charter boats which went through regular and extremely professional refittings throughout their life.
And one of them particularly (an Akhir) was simply stunning - with ABT zero speed fin stabs, glass bridge dashboard, brand new C32 Cat engines... the list was endless.
Congrats on new boat, she looks lovely.... if not a bit huge..
I had a great with you James , good to catch up with you.
I really enjoyed the time on your Fathers Yacht , a true blue water cruiser.
The day before was a scorcher fitting a turbo to a nigh on impossible Fairline Targa kad42.
but weird init... its all about history for me.
Current boat done around 1850hrs as of Wednesday when VolvoPaul suffered intolerable heat and my chatter & serviced it. I have a wad of invoices for engine servicing without a year missed since the boat was new. Some years when the boat had done higher hrs it was serviced twice. I will take my engine over a 500hr one without history every day of the week.
But then I know I am odd...
I had a great with you James , good to catch up with you.
I really enjoyed the time on your Fathers Yacht , a true blue water cruiser.
The day before was a scorcher fitting a turbo to a nigh on impossible Fairline Targa kad42.