oldgit
Well-Known Member
Good luck and don’t let your heart rule your head!
A large sign stating this should be erected by law outside every marina and brokers office.
Good luck and don’t let your heart rule your head!
Hope all fixed now Iain? Have you used Alan Stafford? While based at Gloucester, he was happy to venture down to Portishead for Rafiki.Recently had a failed turbo on our f36. KAD44s
Had the boat been on the river the problem would never have manifested itself as at 1200 rpm I would never have known and carried our blissfully unaware
I would be wary buying a boat on the river unless I could get it out to sea and run it at curing speed.
Unless, of course you intend to keep it on the river
Good luck and don’t let your heart rule your head!
I would be wary buying a boat on the river unless I could get it out to sea and run it at curing speed.
Although you cannot properly test the turbos and cooling system, you can establish it has good oil pressure and doesn't leak oil or water just with a long run up and down the river. You can also rev the engine right up in neutral. The gearbox will have had a pretty easy life too. The drive plate is an unknown - but unless the boat has hit a rock and seriously bent a prop, it's probably in great condition. The rest of the boat and especially the electrics have not spent years exposed to the corrosive sea air.the high risk of the engine needing serious work.
I viewed a boat on the Thames this week where it had spent all its life. The broker did say that, as a river boat, the VHF, anchor windlass, trim tabs and nav lights would never have been used. This is on top of an engine that's never been run beyond fast idle. They would not allow running the engine in gear on the pontoon, so there was no way of knowing if the turbo worked, or the cooling system was at all effective.
I made an offer that reflected the work that needed doing to get up to coastal spec and the high risk of the engine needing serious work. That was refused.
I accept that coastal boats can have problems that a sea trial might not reveal, but I don't think that river based boats are worth the hassle and risk unless priced to reflect that (or a decent trial under load can be carried out).
Never ever take anything on board from the broker , make your own mind up its your cash . It’s in his small print that you employ the right trades to check what your buying and it’s suitable for the purpose required , I’ve heard this a million times .I viewed a boat on the Thames this week where it had spent all its life. The broker did say that, as a river boat, the VHF, anchor windlass, trim tabs and nav lights would never have been used. This is on top of an engine that's never been run beyond fast idle. They would not allow running the engine in gear on the pontoon, so there was no way of knowing if the turbo worked, or the cooling system was at all effective.
I made an offer that reflected the work that needed doing to get up to coastal spec and the high risk of the engine needing serious work. That was refused.
I accept that coastal boats can have problems that a sea trial might not reveal, but I don't think that river based boats are worth the hassle and risk unless priced to reflect that (or a decent trial under load can be carried out).
I put it down as high risk, but I'm not going to argue with you! The fact it was a KAD 43 engine didn't do anything to ease my worries either. Although it was very clean, the coolant looked like blue milkshake.Buying a boat on a restricted river hoping that it will perform ok on the sea is suicidal
I don't understand your point about items like VHF , anchor windlass trim tabs and nav lights as these items can easily be tested and may just as easily found to be faulty on a boat in a coastal marina.
I put it down as high risk, but I'm not going to argue with you! The fact it was a KAD 43 engine didn't do anything to ease my worries either. Although it was very clean, the coolant looked like blue milkshake.
Fair point, but this boat needed an anchor, chain, DSC VHF and aerial, antifouling (probably with barrier coat) anodes and a damn good compounding polish. Together with the transport by road, this tots up to at least £3k. On top of that, the owner was clearly not a serious seller and I got the feeling that whatever the surveyor found, she would not be taking anything off the price. Why did I view it? A rare boat in this country, a perfect fit for our requirements and the triumph of hope over experience!
Peoplebuy boats and often expect them to be like cars. Predictable reliable etc.
Boats are not at like cars. I am on my sixth boat. I have bought boats based on rivers and boats based on the sea. Unfortunately a sea trial on the day will only reveal so much. There is still no guarantee that the thing will work a month later.
An older boat will sooner or later need parts. Might be turbos or injector cleaning, definitely cooling system cleaning. What ever you do there is a risk. Best you can do is look at the overall condition and service history. I bought a sea based boat 7 years old with so called professional service history. No problems on two sea trials, ran beautifully. Wish I had never bought it, it was terrible. Years before bought a boat based on the Thames took it to sea etc and it was great for the 6 years we owned it.
If you buy a river based boat or a sea based boat don't expect to truck it to the new marina on the coast and set off for the canaries in it. Take some time and test it carefully looking for any issues. Short trips close to marina, build up distances and speeds. Fingers crossed they will be little ones. Fix them as you find them and build up confidence in the boat. Worst case you may find an engine issue, but its unlikely to need a brand new engine.
What make of boat and what engines are you considering.?