clyst
Well-Known Member
'unlike the Centaur'!
N
Oh dear got wrong again! Cheers .
'unlike the Centaur'!
N
As you're in Wales, you may be able to moor a fin keeler relatively cheaply, which might open your options to small fin keelers, which due to mooring costs one can barely give away around the Solent, but I see you have homed in on boats which can take the ground which are certainly a better investment.
The Macwester 26 is a solid tank of a boat with a goodly amount of room. There is a generous engine bay which means maintenance of the engine is a doddle. It has a roomy, simple and family friendly cockpit devoid of main sheet tracks and other family unfriendly fixtures.
There is a modest amount of wood, enough to make them classic looking but not enough to have you rubbing and scraping all winter. Down below, there is standing height for medium sized people and plenty of room for longer passages and all the kit required. The 27' version of the boat has twin lazerettes astern which offers room enough to get a small human into.
OK, they make a fair amount of leeway but if you buy the Colvic Atlanta 27 version, these have deeper more powerful keels.
Macwesters are now getting old, in our club alone we have seen at least 5 of them over the last ten years with osmosis some quite rampant, also gelcoat cracking problems on topsides & deck, not a lot you can do with them once that starts happening except tosh them with dulux every year. Far better to buy a Sabre 27.
the keel up, she draws 2' or less if heeled, so if really gagging at near closing time I suspect might beat you to the bar.
She'll settle upright in mud, and apart from exceptional circumstances I would't dry out any boat on hard sand - next question ?!
There are several Mac westers in our club including Nick Robinsons off this thread, they are bomb proof boats the 27 is a much better boat than the 26 and do fetch more money and do sail better, both require a good wind to get going. I own a Mac wester Rowan 22 and it's quicker and points better than either the 26 or 27 in winds less than a force 4 but they have the edge off the wind if it's much stronger.
Did the pressure washer work?
Nick (who really must get to the boat and start the winter jobs......)
Hi,
I'm thinking about the purchase of a Macwester 26, bilge keel
This is a project boat in need of a lot of work.
If i can purchase for a fair price is it a good / strong boat for general crusing?
What other areas of work should i be looking at?
Bosun Higgs,
Are these keels encapsulated ? I thought they were but this isn't a design I've been involved with apart from helping an owner crane one out years ago, and sailing straight past them which doesn't take a genius in a normal boat !
If re-bolting keels which are encapsulated, I can imagine the process, also that a great deal of hassle would be involved...