SailBobSquarePants
Well-Known Member
Boat size is personal...
Zagato, I know due to our correspondence and your posts that you are looking at this question vis a vis older, used boats. So there is an AWFUL lot of very useful advice and observations in this thread, so let me try to add some things directly at your situation:
1) Older boats do NOT, necessarily, increase in waterline length as fast as their overall length might make it seem - for example, a Nic 32 has a waterline length of only 24 feet! That is due to the racing rules of the time, and prevailing design philosophy that they influenced. Modern 32 footers have a much, much greater waterline length - some of them seemingly at least 31 foot at the waterline! As a result, an older 32 footer will not have the same hull speed as a modern 32 footer, and if fact may not have THAT much over a modern smaller boat in some conditions. As others have mentioned, the older 32 footer will have better characteristics in some conditions, regardless of waterline length...
2) Larger, older boats take more maintenance that smaller, older boats. More area to paint, more headlining to renew, more plumbing to revitalize. It doesn't SEEM like more, but when you get into projects having two sinks instead of one doubles the installation of water filters, new spigots, hoses, etc. The wiring is often more complex. especially as 32 footers will start integrating 240v power or shore lines, which many smaller boats will not have. Etc, etc, etc...
3) The converse of that is you will HAVE the advantage of 240V power on nearly all 32 footers, even if only as simple as an external power port and a single 240v outlet inside. If you spend any time in marinas 240V is a big, big comfort factor.
4) As has been mentioned, but I will repeat, the stowage on a 32 footer is so, so much greater, even on an old narrow one like my Nic 32. We keep wetsuits, a TV/DVD with external antenna, board games galore, plenty of clothing, and sometimes a laptop when we are onboard. We keep paper books and my Sony e-reader loaded with about 200 more. Basically, we can use the boat as a caravan even if we don't feel like sailing, or my crew doesn't like the look of the weather - and we DO, quite a lot. With a tube oil-filled heater, I expect to continue to use it well into the winter as a remote place to get some solitary work done this winter.
5) What I haven't seen mentioned (because we are mostly guys in this thread!) is that the GALLEYS of 32 footers are infinitely more accommodating to serious cooking than that on smaller boats. To my gf, if she couldn't cook on board using our Taylor double burner paraffin stove and warming oven, she would not enjoy her time on-board. And we wouldn't eat as well, and it wouldn't be as nice on longer stays. Having the stowage for enough foodstuffs, and the double burner stove and warming oven makes boat-cooked meals nearly the equal of home. If your wife or gf likes to cook, it is something to consider.
That's me done...
Cheers,
Robert
Zagato, I know due to our correspondence and your posts that you are looking at this question vis a vis older, used boats. So there is an AWFUL lot of very useful advice and observations in this thread, so let me try to add some things directly at your situation:
1) Older boats do NOT, necessarily, increase in waterline length as fast as their overall length might make it seem - for example, a Nic 32 has a waterline length of only 24 feet! That is due to the racing rules of the time, and prevailing design philosophy that they influenced. Modern 32 footers have a much, much greater waterline length - some of them seemingly at least 31 foot at the waterline! As a result, an older 32 footer will not have the same hull speed as a modern 32 footer, and if fact may not have THAT much over a modern smaller boat in some conditions. As others have mentioned, the older 32 footer will have better characteristics in some conditions, regardless of waterline length...
2) Larger, older boats take more maintenance that smaller, older boats. More area to paint, more headlining to renew, more plumbing to revitalize. It doesn't SEEM like more, but when you get into projects having two sinks instead of one doubles the installation of water filters, new spigots, hoses, etc. The wiring is often more complex. especially as 32 footers will start integrating 240v power or shore lines, which many smaller boats will not have. Etc, etc, etc...
3) The converse of that is you will HAVE the advantage of 240V power on nearly all 32 footers, even if only as simple as an external power port and a single 240v outlet inside. If you spend any time in marinas 240V is a big, big comfort factor.
4) As has been mentioned, but I will repeat, the stowage on a 32 footer is so, so much greater, even on an old narrow one like my Nic 32. We keep wetsuits, a TV/DVD with external antenna, board games galore, plenty of clothing, and sometimes a laptop when we are onboard. We keep paper books and my Sony e-reader loaded with about 200 more. Basically, we can use the boat as a caravan even if we don't feel like sailing, or my crew doesn't like the look of the weather - and we DO, quite a lot. With a tube oil-filled heater, I expect to continue to use it well into the winter as a remote place to get some solitary work done this winter.
5) What I haven't seen mentioned (because we are mostly guys in this thread!) is that the GALLEYS of 32 footers are infinitely more accommodating to serious cooking than that on smaller boats. To my gf, if she couldn't cook on board using our Taylor double burner paraffin stove and warming oven, she would not enjoy her time on-board. And we wouldn't eat as well, and it wouldn't be as nice on longer stays. Having the stowage for enough foodstuffs, and the double burner stove and warming oven makes boat-cooked meals nearly the equal of home. If your wife or gf likes to cook, it is something to consider.
That's me done...
Cheers,
Robert