w0tty
Active Member
If you saw a boat advertised as a “year 2000 Bayliner 2855”, would you expect the boat to have been manufactured in 2000 or 1999 ?
The reason I ask is that I’ve been informed some Yacht Brokers advertise their boats as “year 2000” , meaning 2000 model but actually built in 1999.
Is this common practice?
And what happens to Joe Bloggs, who, all along believes he’s buying a 2000 boat, hands over his hard earned cash, only to find that when the boat is delivered and he looks at the documentation, it was actually manufactured in 1999.
Surely there would be a difference in price paid ??? or am I missing something here ??
If I purchased a second hand 1999 Ford car, I wouldn’t expect to pay more just because it was a 2000 model, in fact, if the seller advertised it as a 2000 Ford, surely he’d get jumped on my Trading Standards.
So, am I missing something? or in the words of the current Nationwide advert, when selling second hand boats “it doesn’t work like that”
Your comments please.
The reason I ask is that I’ve been informed some Yacht Brokers advertise their boats as “year 2000” , meaning 2000 model but actually built in 1999.
Is this common practice?
And what happens to Joe Bloggs, who, all along believes he’s buying a 2000 boat, hands over his hard earned cash, only to find that when the boat is delivered and he looks at the documentation, it was actually manufactured in 1999.
Surely there would be a difference in price paid ??? or am I missing something here ??
If I purchased a second hand 1999 Ford car, I wouldn’t expect to pay more just because it was a 2000 model, in fact, if the seller advertised it as a 2000 Ford, surely he’d get jumped on my Trading Standards.
So, am I missing something? or in the words of the current Nationwide advert, when selling second hand boats “it doesn’t work like that”
Your comments please.