Mikehp0
Well-Known Member
Hi Everyone. I'm new to this forum but very impressed with the quality of advice, courtesy and humour.
Can you help me out regarding a boat upgrade dilemma?
I have a day boat - a Yamarin 68DC which was bought to trailer between Padstow and Poole. I've enjoyed cruising Poole and the south coast so much that it doesn't go near Padstow nowadays and lives in a Poole dry stack.
I want to upgrade to a boat suitable for weekends away and keep it on a marina mooring. My wife and I have 2 big teenagers - one loves fresh air whilst my wife and the other one like having a roof and a heater unless 20c+. Similarly, the first slam or roll and half the family demands to go home.
Budget would probably stretch to £150k and the boats I've short-listed are used 2008 Sealine SC35s or a new Beneteau Antares 30 SeaMotion . Not sure there is a budget for running costs and repairs!
Antares:
Pros: nice warm saloon for half the family, fly bridge for the rest, single engine running costs, no canvas covers (I really don't like them), brand new so no issues, ongoing shaft drive low maintenance bills, fantastic sea keeping (helped deliver the Southampton show boat from Swanwick to Brighton last week in a force 4-5 and it was superb)
Cons: 2nd cabin double bunks don't compare to SC35's great second cabin and hasn't impressed the family, generally not as "posh" or impressive.
Sealine SC35
Pros: Big, posh, great accommodation. Family have all said they'd "love to stay on it."
Cons: twin engine and outdrive leg repair costs (any idea how much I should budget for on an '08 model?)
no flybridge - hence will be driven permanently closed up, canvas covers in place- hence potentially messy, cold & wet, will it handle the rough-stuff as well as the Antares at the inevitable 18-20knot family-friendly cruise? (the Antares dealer was very dismissive about the SC35 and other stern drive sports cruisers' rough sea handling)
Other Options?
The family won't look at anything that looks old or traditional. It has to be sleek, modern and streamlined. So, the smart modern chipboard Antares fit out is considered more attractive than a solid traditional Aquador or Nimbus cabin. An Antares 9.80 with twin engines at half the Antares 30 new price seemed like a good idea to me but didn't have the "wow factor".
Your help would be appreciated - particularly your views on sea keeping.
Can you help me out regarding a boat upgrade dilemma?
I have a day boat - a Yamarin 68DC which was bought to trailer between Padstow and Poole. I've enjoyed cruising Poole and the south coast so much that it doesn't go near Padstow nowadays and lives in a Poole dry stack.
I want to upgrade to a boat suitable for weekends away and keep it on a marina mooring. My wife and I have 2 big teenagers - one loves fresh air whilst my wife and the other one like having a roof and a heater unless 20c+. Similarly, the first slam or roll and half the family demands to go home.
Budget would probably stretch to £150k and the boats I've short-listed are used 2008 Sealine SC35s or a new Beneteau Antares 30 SeaMotion . Not sure there is a budget for running costs and repairs!
Antares:
Pros: nice warm saloon for half the family, fly bridge for the rest, single engine running costs, no canvas covers (I really don't like them), brand new so no issues, ongoing shaft drive low maintenance bills, fantastic sea keeping (helped deliver the Southampton show boat from Swanwick to Brighton last week in a force 4-5 and it was superb)
Cons: 2nd cabin double bunks don't compare to SC35's great second cabin and hasn't impressed the family, generally not as "posh" or impressive.
Sealine SC35
Pros: Big, posh, great accommodation. Family have all said they'd "love to stay on it."
Cons: twin engine and outdrive leg repair costs (any idea how much I should budget for on an '08 model?)
no flybridge - hence will be driven permanently closed up, canvas covers in place- hence potentially messy, cold & wet, will it handle the rough-stuff as well as the Antares at the inevitable 18-20knot family-friendly cruise? (the Antares dealer was very dismissive about the SC35 and other stern drive sports cruisers' rough sea handling)
Other Options?
The family won't look at anything that looks old or traditional. It has to be sleek, modern and streamlined. So, the smart modern chipboard Antares fit out is considered more attractive than a solid traditional Aquador or Nimbus cabin. An Antares 9.80 with twin engines at half the Antares 30 new price seemed like a good idea to me but didn't have the "wow factor".
Your help would be appreciated - particularly your views on sea keeping.