pvb
Well-Known Member
Halberg Rassy gives displacement and keel weight in Tons, displacement 7.5 tons, keel 2.9, Tons total 10.4 tons.
Errr... displacement is the total weight!
Halberg Rassy gives displacement and keel weight in Tons, displacement 7.5 tons, keel 2.9, Tons total 10.4 tons.
I should jolly well hope so. Factors of safety under 100% are generally frowned upon ...
"I might be able to afford a marine mortgage of 100k over 10 years but no way 300k."
Your plight rends the heart.
I tend to concur however - sadly - normal civilities are left at the door on t'web. Lets assume it was typed with a smile on the lips and a twinkle in the eye......
It was indeed.
But I must admit, I would consider spending less on the boat and more on the trip.
So we get to the real problem of the so called AWB. They are designed for the biggest market which seems to be the charter market.
Okeydoky. Good point. I dream about an expensive boat when actually the better thing to do is buy a lower cost seaworthy boat and actually go!!
No reflection on you because I see this comment written regularly about the AWB
But can anybody actually prove that the charter market is bigger than the private market or is it a myth
Amusing to read all the musings about depreciation, opportunity cost etc.
We should all face the fact that a boat is a depreciating luxury and, however much you strain at the gnat, in real terms they will all cost you money.
As an AWB gets people afloat, has a fairly small capital cost, it does it's job.
One has to suffer from a particularly constricted view to aver that an AWB owner has no pride of ownership - though I do know of one HR owner who called off a French trip due to fear of getting oil on his boat; which might be considered as taking such pride too far.
As to these obscure arguments about the relative weight of hulls - the use of aramids and carbon fibre as well as Corex composite lay-up are a recognised way of having a light, strong boat - I own examples of both.
I write as the owner of a british built boat which is (according to the recent survey) worth far more than I paid for it and has given me a quarter of a century and 44K nautical miles of safe single-handing in Western Approches and the Med.
Bu**er opportunity-cost and inflation - it's been my magic carpet to see places and things I couldn't hope to have visited in any other manner...
I would just hope those owners of Macwesters and Centaurs, Twisters and Centurions, Oysters and Swans have anything like the enjoyment I've had out of this my 3rd boat.
Okeydoky. Good point. I dream about an expensive boat when actually the better thing to do is buy a lower cost seaworthy boat and actually go!!
Over the last 3 years my AWB 31 ft boat (bought & paid for new 11 years ago) has cost me £ 33,000-00 in running costs- No breakages, except for running aground & loosing the rudder- £5K
Would an expensive boat have cost more or less to run ( ignoring the rudder issue)?
Because that has to be taken into account
Having owned 3 Scandanavian built boats, the mystique of quality is precisely that. ie a myth. What you are paying for is the very expensive worker's compensation package.
Over the last 3 years my AWB 31 ft boat (bought & paid for new 11 years ago) has cost me £ 33,000-00 in running costs-
£11k per annum. Good grief. How on earth do you manage that? My 26' boat costs me £200 in insurance, £150 for swinging mooring, £550 for winter storage, £75 for sail overhaul and £100 for engine parts, antifouling and so on annually. A grand a year, ish.
MaMaybe bebecause you are in the south of a low coscost councountry and he is in the south of a high cost country? Or a mathematical mistake!!
Over the last 3 years my AWB 31 ft boat (bought & paid for new 11 years ago) has cost me £ 33,000-00 in running costs- No breakages, except for running aground & loosing the rudder- £5K
Would an expensive boat have cost more or less to run ( ignoring the rudder issue)?
Because that has to be taken into account