SmileyGiley
Well-Known Member
All,
Thanks for the earlier feedback, and here's some more questions.
First of all Colvic build quality. Replies to my last post had Colvic Countess build quality rated as very good in one reply, and also recounted problems of serious osmosis problems (yes, with the latter the boat was afloat year round) in another. Any comments? Colvic seem to have built a vast number of hulls, I'd have thought they'd have been pretty good at it.
The Countess hull I was looking at has lots of little angular pits in places - but to my unskilled eye this looks like a moulding issue rather than evidence of blisters.
The boat has been out of the water for several years now. Will this preclude hull moisture readings being useful, or will the osmotic pressure/capillary action have retained any liquid in any existing blisters?
Anybody have any hints about what problems to look for in a boat stored out of the water for several years. All(sic) I can think of are seized mechanicals, from engine to winches to loo pump, plus perished seals/diaphragms etc, water ingress along electricals and generally stuff that hasn't been picked up 'along the way'. Anecdotes more than welcome.
Any alternatives to the Countess 33? We're on a budget of "max" 30k, but then again it can be stretched if the right boat were available. The Countess we are looking at is in budget by dint of being rather tatty. The interior is quite solidly done, but rather dated and dowdy. It will need a degree of remedial work, but generally is functional. Still, if I can stretch our budget to a bigger boat at the cost of not having a brochure interior I'm more than happy. We go to sail, paddle on the beach, get sand in our undies and blue with cold, shiver and recuperate over cocoa or hot choccie, not sit around and admire a pristine saloon.
Cheers
SmileyG
Thanks for the earlier feedback, and here's some more questions.
First of all Colvic build quality. Replies to my last post had Colvic Countess build quality rated as very good in one reply, and also recounted problems of serious osmosis problems (yes, with the latter the boat was afloat year round) in another. Any comments? Colvic seem to have built a vast number of hulls, I'd have thought they'd have been pretty good at it.
The Countess hull I was looking at has lots of little angular pits in places - but to my unskilled eye this looks like a moulding issue rather than evidence of blisters.
The boat has been out of the water for several years now. Will this preclude hull moisture readings being useful, or will the osmotic pressure/capillary action have retained any liquid in any existing blisters?
Anybody have any hints about what problems to look for in a boat stored out of the water for several years. All(sic) I can think of are seized mechanicals, from engine to winches to loo pump, plus perished seals/diaphragms etc, water ingress along electricals and generally stuff that hasn't been picked up 'along the way'. Anecdotes more than welcome.
Any alternatives to the Countess 33? We're on a budget of "max" 30k, but then again it can be stretched if the right boat were available. The Countess we are looking at is in budget by dint of being rather tatty. The interior is quite solidly done, but rather dated and dowdy. It will need a degree of remedial work, but generally is functional. Still, if I can stretch our budget to a bigger boat at the cost of not having a brochure interior I'm more than happy. We go to sail, paddle on the beach, get sand in our undies and blue with cold, shiver and recuperate over cocoa or hot choccie, not sit around and admire a pristine saloon.
Cheers
SmileyG