LONG_KEELER
Well-Known Member
I guess if you like plugging through peasoup then it's fine, but it's not exactly a popular sport.
Still don't get it .
You are half way across the channel and fog comes down.
Then what ?
I guess if you like plugging through peasoup then it's fine, but it's not exactly a popular sport.
The mast is not of a sufficient size to get the radar to a height where it can be useful.![]()
The mast is not of a sufficient size to get the radar to a height where it can be useful.![]()
She's up to £360. Still a good price for a radar set.
Who wouldnt prefer a new car to an old banger - are boats any different?
There are perfectly useful radar installations on motorboats and ribs - probably more useful at times as they aren't transmitting towards the sky on one side and the sea on the other![]()
Seajet will be along in a minute to correct the error of your ways. Seajet has explained on here many times that an Anderson without any creature comforts is far preferable to a AWB without any handholds. I know he will refuse so i didn't offer to swap my jeanneau 43 for such a superior boat.
Way,
the thing is A22's have been selling recently, - see the website in my signature - a good basic no frills example usually fetches just over £4K nowadays.
Ian seems to have been unlucky, possibly down to geographical location, I think not having photo's for the website ad' went against him too, and maybe the interior is a bit disappointing; the long and the short of it is he'd already bought another boat so keeping two will incur financial pressure.
Way,
the thing is A22's have been selling recently, - see the website in my signature - a good basic no frills example usually fetches just over £4K nowadays.
Ian seems to have been unlucky, possibly down to geographical location, I think not having photo's for the website ad' went against him too, and maybe the interior is a bit disappointing; the long and the short of it is he'd already bought another boat so keeping two will incur financial pressure.
Lots of old cars are scrappers
The market is changing: people now mostly seem to come into cruising sailing via sailing schools, a few weeks on 36-38 ft boats with full standing headroom, double berths, hot water, full electronics, powerful engines that start on the button, etc. In about 1970 I don't think I was that untypical in just buying a small cruiser after sailing dinghies and getting on with it - Friday afternoon row out to the mooring (that I laid myself) and off down channel for the weekend, week or month. Sitting headroom, primus stove, a Seagull as auxiliary power, and to start with just charts, a compass and leadline.