gnomus
New Member
Good morning all. I'm thinking of buying a used motor cruiser and have started looking at adverts, You Tube videos and such-like. I know very little, so please excuse my ignorance.
My question relates to the pre-purchase survey/inspection. Some of the cruisers I see offered for sale are currently berthed on rivers or canals. And it would seem that a fair proportion of these boats never get run anywhere other than the river or canal. As such, the engines never get run up to 'cruising' revs or maximum revs. If I get a survey that includes a 'sea/river/canal' trial, then, given the speed restriction, there seems no way for the surveyor to inspect the engines at anything approaching full power. How then can he tell if the engines will manage under full load? There could be an engine issue that only manifests at higher RPM. I spoke to a (canal-based) boat broker this morning in relation to a boat I was interetsted in. He acknowledged that any 'sea trial' would be limited by speed restrictions (4kts rising to 6kts if we took it much further afield). He did not have any real answer to my testing at full-speed question, other than to say 'we've never had any problems'.
As a complete beginner, I have no idea if my concerns about this are legitimate or not. Should I restrict my searches to coastal brokers only - if so that would seem a pity since I am sure that there are a lot of perfectly good river-based cruisers on the market.
Any advice would be much appreciated.
I am looking for something in the 34-40' length, probably with twin-engines. Eventually, I would want to find a suitable coastal marina from which to operate, although there may be some merit in slow-speed operations for a while until I build up some confidence with handling the thing.
My question relates to the pre-purchase survey/inspection. Some of the cruisers I see offered for sale are currently berthed on rivers or canals. And it would seem that a fair proportion of these boats never get run anywhere other than the river or canal. As such, the engines never get run up to 'cruising' revs or maximum revs. If I get a survey that includes a 'sea/river/canal' trial, then, given the speed restriction, there seems no way for the surveyor to inspect the engines at anything approaching full power. How then can he tell if the engines will manage under full load? There could be an engine issue that only manifests at higher RPM. I spoke to a (canal-based) boat broker this morning in relation to a boat I was interetsted in. He acknowledged that any 'sea trial' would be limited by speed restrictions (4kts rising to 6kts if we took it much further afield). He did not have any real answer to my testing at full-speed question, other than to say 'we've never had any problems'.
As a complete beginner, I have no idea if my concerns about this are legitimate or not. Should I restrict my searches to coastal brokers only - if so that would seem a pity since I am sure that there are a lot of perfectly good river-based cruisers on the market.
Any advice would be much appreciated.
I am looking for something in the 34-40' length, probably with twin-engines. Eventually, I would want to find a suitable coastal marina from which to operate, although there may be some merit in slow-speed operations for a while until I build up some confidence with handling the thing.