Sticky Fingers
Well-Known Member
Love the Contests. The OPs budget would stretch to eg a 42S from the 1990s
yup!![]()
But if you are the lucky chap who buys the 30 year old boat with new decks, new engine, new sails and very well maintained then you have yourself an excellent 30 year old boat......
Not all old boats are the same..... The secret is spotting the difference between a basket case and a gem
It is not difficult to spot as the signs are obvious. However as I have mentioned before the "good" ones you describe are not the ones for sale - for obvious reasons. What prompts people to sell boats is the realisation that they are no longer "good" and they have done the sums required to return them to the condition when they were first bought - and made the sensible decision to move the problem onto somebody else.
This was exactly my experience when I was going through the same process as A1GSS and getting depressed at all the "quality" boats I saw that required huge expenditure, so came to the same conclusion and have now owned two new boats. Buying a project is OK if you don't mind coping with the deficiencies and fixing as you go along (just don't add up the cost and particularly the time), but if you want to sail rather than fix better to buy new - spending a bit more but wearing stuff out rather than fixing old stuff.
Great if you can find somebody selling whoi has already done the fixing, but such opportunities are rare.
Enjoy the search.. but here is a curve to show you different ideas...
GL
http://www.yachtworld.com/core/list...uick&is=false&No=0&Ns=PBoat_sortByPriceDesc|1