PaulRainbow
Well-Known Member
Exactly what I said last week. All this nonsense about court, as I said, that bus left a long time ago!
Stu
Too much clap trap from people who wouldn't know a big end from a bell end :encouragement:
Exactly what I said last week. All this nonsense about court, as I said, that bus left a long time ago!
Stu
Your statement is irrelevant. A trained legal mind would conclude that zero conditioning does not equal reconditioned, whatever definition you choose.
A small claims court judge will assume the boat sold at its market value, the only point of interest is whether any discount was applied in acknowledgement of recognised faults.
Over the years I have noticed that people in your position exude positivity about their capacity to restore an engine back to health. It is very easy for a yacht owner to blow £1000 a year in this fix-up cycle, net result is that 10 years later £10,000 has gone and the engine is even older. The winners are the marine engineers because hourly rates distort financial ownership equation.You commented earlier on pro-engineers in this thread wanting to charge him more money, presumably putting me in that camp.
No. I only expect people to describe their yacht honestly or face legal consequences. A repair is not reconditioning.On the one hand you complain about engineers trying to get more money out of someone, on the other hand, you expect that the PO should have had the engine fully re-manufactured due to water ingress.
Your statement is irrelevant. A trained legal mind would conclude that zero conditioning does not equal reconditioned, whatever definition you choose.
A small claims court judge will assume the boat sold at its market value, the only point of interest is whether any discount was applied in acknowledgement of recognised faults.
A repair is not reconditioning.
Reconditioning must involve some degree of elective improvement otherwise it is just a repair or a routine service.Hmm, not quite so.
We are discussing options to help the OP think through his next action. One of those options is what to do if no evidence of reconditioning can be shown, in this situation many are convinced there is is still absolutely zero as in zilch chance of redress. Others think otherwise but you are struggling to cope with the concept you might not be right.Where are you getting zero condition from ?
We are discussing options to help the OP think through his next action. One of those options options is what to do if no evidence of reconditioning can be shown, in this situation many are convinced this is still absolutely zero as in zilch chance of redress. Others think otherwise but you are struggling to cope with the concept you might not be right.
I concede that as the OP has provided more details later in the thread the outlook for the legal route is getting worse. This is still a useful thread about how vague the "reconditioned" phrase is, I would go further and say the presence of the claim in a sale description immediately puts me on "bluffing dodgy owner alert".What I am suggestion and have been from the start is he get on with his life and forget at this late date to take any action against the PO as not only it's going to stress him out even more and cost him more money but the change of winning any case is at the very less slim .
Especially if it came to light that work has been done on the engine , which it Seen it may have .
I have to wonder how many people would had taken out a. Good working engine on the say so of one guy just to see if indeed it has been worked on .
I know for sure I wouldn't , at the very less got a second option .
I concede that as the OP has provided more details later in the thread the outlook for the legal route is getting worse. This is still a useful thread about how vague the "reconditioned" phrase is, I would go further and say the presence of the claim in a sale description immediately puts me on "bluffing dodgy owner alert".
Over the years I have noticed that people in your position exude positivity about their capacity to restore an engine back to health. It is very easy for a yacht owner to blow £1000 a year in this fix-up cycle, net result is that 10 years later £10,000 has gone and the engine is even older. The winners are the marine engineers because hourly rates distort financial ownership equation.
No. I only expect people to describe their yacht honestly or face legal consequences. A repair is not reconditioning.
I concede that as the OP has provided more details later in the thread the outlook for the legal route is getting worse. This is still a useful thread about how vague the "reconditioned" phrase is, I would go further and say the presence of the claim in a sale description immediately puts me on "bluffing dodgy owner alert".
I know when someone is on dodgy ground because they take an extreme version of something they think you said and then dispute that imaginary statement.Knee jerk "reconditioning" serves nobody well. Fully re-manufacturing an engine just because it has been flooded would be a waste of time and a waste of the owners money, water being in the engine won't wear anything ot, so nothing internal will need changing. Drain, clean, flush, service and paint is all that is needed to bring the engine itself back into the condition it was in before it was flooded. Some external ancillary items, mostly electrical will also need to be repaired or replaced.
What I am suggestion and have been from the start is he get on with his life and forget at this late date to take any action against the PO as not only it's going to stress him out even more and cost him more money but the change of winning any case is at the very less slim .
Especially if it came to light that work has been done on the engine , which it Seen it may have .
I have to wonder how many people would had taken out a. Good working engine on the say so of one guy just to see if indeed it has been worked on .
I know for sure I wouldn't , at the very less got a second option .
The only option the OP has now that he gone so far to remove the engine is ,
Now he has pass it on to a good engineer company Is to see if anything do need doing to it while it's in bits and have it put back .
We have all to remember until a few posting ago nothing has been said about the engine having any problem , only the gearbox .
I know when someone is on dodgy ground because they take an extreme version of something they think you said and then dispute that imaginary statement.
I have already said re-manufacturing is the far end of the spectrum with repair and routine servicing at the other end. Reconditioning is something in-between and would involve an element of elective improvement.
Why not challenge the concise point that I made previously rather than huffing & puffing about your own imagination.
O
With the actual engine nothing has gone wrong, it was reinstalled by somebody who blatently didn’t care about his work. The alternator was not wired up correctly, the starter motor was rusted. The engine mounts were on their last legs and there was no attempt made to clean or remove the flaking paint from the engine space whilst it was out. The calorifier had been botched and the hoses were rotten. The wiring loom had been butchered. So i think i was justified in removing it to have it examined by a professional. For my peace of mind.
Er....why?Thing is though Dave, you've drip fed the facts, so everything in the first 15 pages is now largely immaterial.
O
With the actual engine nothing has gone wrong, it was reinstalled by somebody who blatently didn’t care about his work. The alternator was not wired up correctly, the starter motor was rusted. The engine mounts were on their last legs and there was no attempt made to clean or remove the flaking paint from the engine space whilst it was out. The calorifier had been botched and the hoses were rotten. The wiring loom had been butchered. So i think i was justified in removing it to have it examined by a professional. For my peace of mind.
morning VicThere no doubt there was work that needed doing , this you knew well before you even got your hands on the boat Dave ,
We have a Moody 42 and it would take some work to remove our engine part of the cockpit would need removing to start with .
The list of job you just given would had been very easy to do while the engine was in place and they give no indication that there anything wrong with the engine other then at some point water has got in there .
I have to say there has been times when I started a job and tho , let just rip the lot out and start again , but I not sure I would remove the engine because of a starter motor , alternator and some mounts and I know about engine let alone if I didn't .
As for your engineer I guess he took one look at the mess and came to the conclusion the engine hasn't had any work on it , just show how inexperienced he was , other wise he would had carried out some test before stating its Fcuk and suggesting taking it out .
As for the engineer who the PO employed the rusty starter , mounts or the wiring could have had nothing to do with him ,
if all he was asked was to work on the engine , it could had easily been the PO him self who removed the engine and replaced it , replacing the old starter and alternator and making a mess of the wiring , just like in your case where you removed the engine , Volvo could turn that engine into a new engine but you putting it back could make a hash up and the next guy who looks in there could think the engine look crap .
I for one would be very interested in the findings .
Good luck
Er....why?
My original question was about whether there was a legal definition of the word ‘reconditioned’.
I think that thanks to the many replies and discussions that there is not. The engine is still in transit ( quite literally as it’s in the back of my van). As part of this debate i was asked quite rightly whether i had had the engine removed unnecessarily. My further information in in reply to this. I apologise if i have misled anyone, it was not my intention. The ‘bolt on bits’ i am fully prepared to change or repair but the engine itself......well time will tell.
Thanks for your advice