oldfrank
Well-Known Member
I'd go for it and get a cockpit cover made. The sheathing is a risk but I think I'd take that risk. OF
I just came across this thread and noticed all the "go for it" comments. Yes, it is a pretty boat. It is also a 50-year-old boat with water coming through the topside planking seams even when the boat has been in the water for the season, and through the bottom somewhere. It has been epoxied on the outside only and below the waterline only.
In common parlance, it's knackered.
As the owner of a 64-year-old 27-footer I can point out that she needed a major rebuild after about 25 years of hard use (offshore racing in the 1950s), and has needed 8 frames repaired, minor planking repairs and a partial stem rebuild in the 10 years I have had her.
The yard I use also had in a carvel-built leaker of about 26 feet, somewhat older. The advice was that to build a new one might well be cheaper. The owner insisted, so all of the fastenings were replaced and the gaps between the planks (the timber was in good heart) filled with glued splines. The hull was then epoxied - but inside and out and above and below the waterline to make it as near as possible waterproof.
Buying a leaky wooden boat that has a plastic hull cover below the waterline seems to me about as sensible as standing in a shower tearing up bundles of £50 notes. The plastic outer hull will have to come off to sort out the planking and its slack nails.
It's a very pretty boat and could make a great restoration project for an owner with deep pockets, or good boatwright skills and plenty of time.
The owner asked me if I want to get the boat out of the water for to evaluate what work needs to be done, or, if it's for to re-consider buying it at all. If it's for re-consideration, he told me that he was going to put it back on the market. btw: The advert was never taken away in the first place, I spend a lot of time to inspect to boat several times and spend money on the surveyor, the pressure on top of it makes me extremely uncomfortable.
So, I am close to walking away.
Likewise, how can you believe somebody who has seen the same photographs and commentedHow can you believe anybody who has not seen the boat, just because he has seen other boats!
?The drawings of the boat show a very strong construction so the structure is probably stable
Likewise, how can you believe somebody who has seen the same photographs and commented?
The photographs of the boat do not show a very strong construction. They show a pretty ordinary construction with somewhat widely-spaced, bent frames with additional (sawn?) frames which carry steel plates which look to be in line with the chainplates. To be "very strong" the frames would need to be closer together, it would help to have a couple of laminated frames at each end of the saloon and some decent-sized floors under the cockpit. However, the construction should be adequate.
I'm making an observation based on my own experience of carvel-planked yachts, one of which I rebuilt (albeit a long time ago and she was very lightly built), and in light of discussions I have had with boatwrights with many years of experience of building wooden boats.
I would be very cautious over taking on a partially-sheathed yacht, and would look at it as either something to sail until it falls apart, or as a major restoration project. If a carvel yacht has been sheathed, there's something wrong with it. A sound carvel hull may leak like a sieve on launching after the winter, but it should stop leaking after 48 hours. If it isn't leaking, why sheathe it?
Ultimately it's up to udo - he asked for advice, and he has got it from various sources, and with some disagreement. I'm not telling him not to buy it, I'm advising him that I probably wouldn't, and why.
History of the boat:If I was buying such a lovely thing I would hammer the complete underwater hull at no more than six inch spacing and listen for dull sounds. This would indicate delaminating of the covering or some rotten wood. Even then not so serious. I would take the covering off locally to the repair and then replace. I would also want to check if it is epoxy glass sheathing or cascover. I would be happier with cascover as it has some flex (so I understand). If it is epxoy/glass why? But then if there are so many unmarked rocks in the Baltic may be this is a good thing?
Good luck with it.