Twister_Ken
Well-Known Member
"How much is a new 310 anyway?"
Looking at somewhere north of £160K by the time it's specced up.
Looking at somewhere north of £160K by the time it's specced up.
Yes but where are you going to put them all, seriously? .
Nobody buys the HR31/310 anyway, its only for poor people who cant afford a proper one. I asked HR once why they made it, they said 'because we expect people to trade up the range...'
In any case, it does have a chart table, only its outside, under the sprayhood. Thats why all the Swedish chandlers do nice plastic chart covers.
Underneath the windscreen that HR have. In front of the wheel maybe.
"How much is a new 310 anyway?"
Looking at somewhere north of £160K by the time it's specced up.
HR - Welcome to the 21st Century! Electronics that's the way to go!
Have you been ferretting about on my boat again? They will all come in use one day.Well... its not just the chart table is it.. its the whole space... and in particular the storage under the table and alongside... were else to store the 2006 Almanac, the spare charts for south Brittany and the Baltic north of Estonia that came with the boat... the 3rd edition of Nigel Calders Boat electrics, the instruction manuals for the "back up" gps, those assorted little screws which may come in handy at some time, the Q flag, the tattered Cornish ensign, the bilge pump handle, that funny blowy thing that in theory doubles as a fog horn, that funny cast bit that fell off the mast that you dont want to throw away, those little stubs of pencils, the log book, the dividers, and the spare dividers, and the plotter, the spare knife and your leatherman, the spare fuses, the shear pins for the outboard, the funnel for the petrol can, that little hand held wind instrument, 5 years worth of reciepts from harbour masters, 5 years worth of glossy guides to various harbours obtained at great expense from the harbourmasters of various south coast refuges, that little butane stove lighter and the spare matches, assorted loose change, fuel receipts, two of those little PRB licence radios which you thought would be a good idea, but on relfection you havent used in 5 years, the dingy patch kit, several bottle openers filched from assorted hotels, the spare plotter, last years tide tables for the river Exe, bits of string, the charge cradle for the hh VHF, the bino caps, the sail repair kit, various tubes of epoxy glue, the book of walks between Torquay and Brixham, 13 spare partially used AA batteries, a carbiner clip, and your spare glasses.
Where else to store the 2006 Almanac, the spare charts for south Brittany and the Baltic north of Estonia that came with the boat... the 3rd edition of Nigel Calders Boat electrics, the instruction manuals for the "back up" gps, those assorted little screws which may come in handy at some time, the Q flag, the tattered Cornish ensign, the bilge pump handle, that funny blowy thing that in theory doubles as a fog horn, that funny cast bit that fell off the mast that you dont want to throw away, those little stubs of pencils, the log book, the dividers, and the spare dividers, and the plotter, the spare knife and your leatherman, the spare fuses, the shear pins for the outboard, the funnel for the petrol can, that little hand held wind instrument, 5 years worth of reciepts from harbour masters, 5 years worth of glossy guides to various harbours obtained at great expense from the harbourmasters of various south coast refuges, that little butane stove lighter and the spare matches, assorted loose change, fuel receipts, two of those little PRB licence radios which you thought would be a good idea, but on relfection you havent used in 5 years, the dingy patch kit, several bottle openers filched from assorted hotels, the spare plotter, last years tide tables for the river Exe, bits of string, the charge cradle for the hh VHF, the bino caps, the sail repair kit, various tubes of epoxy glue, the book of walks between Torquay and Brixham, 13 spare partially used AA batteries, a carbiner clip, and your spare glasses.
I think on a boat as small as 30 feet, where any dedicated chart table would be a small one, using the saloon table is perfectly acceptable.
Sounds like its in your shopping trolley TK!
"How much is a new 310 anyway?"
Looking at somewhere north of £160K by the time it's specced up.
Some nice 37 footers for that sort of money,
Closer in size the Finngulf 331 would be cheaper than the HR, and probably matches it for quality and beats it for performance.
.
Well if Kens kitted out figure of around £160,000 is correct, for a 31ft boat that has to be a real triumph of imagined marina one-upman-shipover commonsense!
As mentioned elsewhere in the thread, even if you think you have bought yourself a status symbol there will be much laughing in the marshes from both owners of larger HRs and those that spent their money on something less costly but probably better and almost certainly in performance. This would be like buying an old terraced 2 up 2 down house on Sandbanks peninsular!
Just imagine the launch party. 'Nice boat Fred, didn't know they made them this small' or 'HOW MUCH?' or later on the pontoons out of earshot, 'did you hear how much Fred paid, he could have had a really good boat for half that price and had money left over for another in the Med!'
Pray tell, Mr Breeze, where you'd find a high interest savings account at the moment?
According to a couple of people in the biz, at the moment one reason that high end new and used boats are selling is because punter's money sitting in the bank is earning FA.