zarathustra
Well-Known Member
I am comparing a 3 year old Swan with a newbuild fully laden AWB what is unrealistic about the comparison ? It is what it is. Of course I could go for an older Swan but to find one at circa £400 I would have to go older than 10 years and that brings in wear and tear and more importantly system obsolecence issues which I really dont want - as we all know technology has advanced in leaps and bounds in the last 10 years.
I agree that buying a secondhand JenBavBen probably makes sense and to use that as a 'learner' before committing to a more expensive investment.
Do you have alot of sailing experience? What exactly do you mean "to use as learner" and will you be sailing single-handed, or short handed, or with more crew? I am not sure Swans are considered the best for short-handed sailors but boats can be adapted.
I am not sure where you are looking for used boats, but there are loads of them for sale, a huge choice if you search the umpteen yacht brokers websites from all over the world. Also a good time to buy.
I would suggest with your budget not to worry about a boat being outdated. realistically, for cruising boats the only significant parts of the boat that have become outdated are the electronics, and these are relatively inexpensive to update. Cruising boats themselves haven't really become outdated at all, or at least they don't get outdated the same speed as racing boats, and even still in 2005 a 30 year old 33ft boat won the Fastnet race!!!
As for Swans, they are nice boats for sure, but for cruising I can't really see that they have much more than the other Swedish builders. Swans got their good reputation from their earlier boats which were designed by S&S in the 60's and 70's, and still very much sought after. Many sailors would have the same x-factor as you call it about most of the Swedish boats, Hallberg Rassy being a very popular one, unless by x-factor you mean racing pedigree, in which case Swans x-factor came from the 70's, and you have said boats older than 10 years don't interest you!
Wear and tear??? reupholster it in your choice of colours, no big deal.
And system obsolesence???? That probably means the electronics, which can easily be updated at little cost.
I am not sure that technology has advanced leaps and bounds in cruising boats, I would have thought most of the leaps and bounds are only relevant to racing yachts.
If you like the Swans then go for it, but I guess most would encourage you to look beyond the label and judge the boat on merits and suitability for what it is used for. And if it is a "learner" boat then £900k sounds like an awful lot of money for a training boat?
If you did want a boat to "learn" in but something not too small, then why not consider something around 40ft or smaller (I would agree with the previous poster, the Danish X-yachts are a smashing boat), of good pedigree that you could easily sell on again at similar price when you have decided between the 3 year old Swan and the new JenBenBav
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