kevingreystones
Active Member
I am considering my next boat purchase and would appreciate comments / recommendations on whether it is sensible to instruct a survey on a brand new boat.
I didn't have a survey ( Squadron 65) - to be honest I did not really consider one.
The boat had snags. Nothing that stopped it moving but there were plenty. I have had several surveys done on boats and I have mostly found things in addition to the surveyor that are irritating, expensive but don't impact the boat per se. Noisy AC, reverse cycle not working etc etc. Things that take time and an understanding of how it works and what it should do. On my last boat this lot added up to £10k paid for by the vendor ( who was a boat dealer). Things also take time to go wrong which a survey wont find. As times passes things seem to settle down and it all works as one ( for a while anyway).
I would suspect that this is the type of thing that a new boat survey would need to pick up to make it worthwhile, and in my view the things the surveyors are not very good at.
I am assuming it is a known manufacture production model. If not then a survey maybe wise, similarly if it is hull 1 or 2 a surveyor might have value.
I would recommend that away from family etc you meet the selling dealer pre making payment and spend some considerable time going over the boat from end to end in fine detail which can be a combined hand over and personal review of issues and the opportunity to check it all works.
I would also recommend a sea trial to listen for rattles and squeaks which the factory can usually know how to fix as they put it together.
Do this before you make the final payment and pay once they have fixed it. There was a reason the Fairline facility at Ipswich had a huge stock or spare parts .... as soon as you head to the med etc parts become slower.
If possible try to do this a good time before you are forced into taking the boat due to holidays and the season slipping away. Mine arrived in mallorca on the 5th August and nothing was going to stop me .... which is not really the best idea to be honest.
I dont agree j’s advice to withhold payment. Invariably the builder won’t hand over ownership without full payment, and when buying a new boat you want ownership as fast as you can get it because of credit risk. I made full final payment on my current boat when it was in the factory 3/4 finished, because I then got absolute ownership. That cures your credit risk which is more important imho than retaining leverage over snag fixing.
Hear, hear... Did you possibly know that the shareholders were going to arrange some additional securities on their own loans?I made full final payment on my current boat when it was in the factory 3/4 finished, because I then got absolute ownership. That cures your credit risk which is more important imho than retaining leverage over snag fixing.
Am I correct that Sunseeker are very good at after sales support
It's each to their own but I'm disagreeing and certainly did not do that with my last boat. I'm arguing that your strategy might be risky and that it can make sense to pay the full price for the boat when it is (approx) 75% finished at the factory and not even ready for a sea trial. You then get registered ownership and are protected if the company goes bust. It depends on the circumstances on the day but all of prin, sunseek, fairline, ferretti group, sealine, Bavaria, mangusta, leopard and many more have had "teetering on the brink" periods when you wouldn't want to extend material €€€ credit to them and it's a worrying moment when you hand over a lot of money to a company that has a smaller net worth and annual income, and owns less real estate, than you do, such is the "cottage industry" nature of boat building.I agree they wont give you the boat without payment, but I assume that an acceptance inspection and sea trial before handing over the final payment ( or if the final payment is large then suitable cash sum retention - £50 k say) would be acceptable? I have in mind here is the list, fi it by Friday I pay and take it away.
No cash no splash as Mr Barke ( and no doubt others) says.