bushwacka
Active Member
These don't come up for sale often. Old but still a very capable classic up for grabs. Looks very underpriced or am I missing something?
Pardon our interruption...
Pardon our interruption...
They weren’t a saildrive originally (don’t think it had been invented). In the photo of the saildrive you can see where the prop used to exit the top of the keel. This is because the engine was midships under a bit of settee that stuck out (not present here). In this boat the engine has been relocated to the companionway area.Very pretty lines. I didn't realise it would be saildrive. Looks a bargain
Particularly if you get rid of that huge 3 bladed prop and fitted a folder.They sail beautifully

I guess a saildrive swap makes sense ... glass in the engine/saildrive bed and cut a hole in the hull.
Probably getting more and more of a faff to find reconditioned v-drives or spare parts which is probably what was originally fitted given the engine location. It's what Corby Yachts are doing with their Contessa 38.
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... there's life in the old dog yet![]()
Looking at the OPs post, it's not possible to get an AWB that size for that money so it's a pointless argument. Getting afloat for 8k in that 34ft boat is not a financial risk, the engine and saildrive are where the majority of the value lies, so a bit of DIY from someone capable and it could find a good home.It doesn’t make sense. You and others would be highly critical of anyone who came on here saying they were thinking of doing that on a MAB. You and others would be all over the proposal claiming that buying a AWB would be better and then writing paragraphs justifying your position.
The volte-face is extraordinary!
Hardly a bargain, there are loads of these old "classics" for sale under 10k. Try this one:
Pardon our interruption...
If its got a balsa cored deck, it is a relatively modern boat (relative to my Trident 24 reference frame) and thus, by definition, at its core, relatively rubbish.The Moody 419 on another current thread is an example of the reality of what can pop up when tropes like "old boats are better built" or "modern boats are rubbish" go unchallenged. To bring that boat up to a standard equivalent to a privately owned, much younger AWB will involve a massive amount of investment, pushing the eventual price into decent AWB territory. The teak deck is shot, and the deck underneath is balsa cored with thousands of screws in it, the chainplates are leaking and are attached to a plywood bulkhead, there are areas of water ingress inside the boat ... E
AWB is Average White Boat. For some reason people here use "AWB" to describe 90s through 2010ish middling cruisers, the Jenneau/Beneteau/Bavaria/other makers are available white plastic bathtubs that all look and work pretty much the same. Some people here love to use the term as a contrast, to imply that other boats are MABs, Manky Auld Boats.If its got a balsa cored deck, it is a relatively modern boat (relative to my Trident 24 reference frame) and thus, by definition, at its core, relatively rubbish.
But then I dont know what an AWB is.
Average White Boat?
Is there a site glossary for this sort of jive?
So is my 1988 Jeanneau an AWB? She more closely resembles a MAB (Manky Auld Boat) and looks nothing like her modern contemporaries, with a relatively narrow stern, single wheel and rudder, and shaft drive. She does have a sugar scoop, although not a completely open transom.AWB is Average White Boat. For some reason people here use "AWB" to describe 90s through 2010ish middling cruisers, the Jenneau/Beneteau/Bavaria/other makers are available white plastic bathtubs that all look and work pretty much the same. Some people here love to use the term as a contrast, to imply that other boats are MABs, Manky Auld Boats.
My suggestion that modern post-classic-AWB-era broad-open-sterned types be called FABs (Fat Ar...) didn't really catch on.
Your Trident 24 is just small, not particularly old. Larger GRP boats have balsa cored decks back to the 60s at least, solid decks would be too much topweight. The core is often not a problem at all on boats with painted decks and no bodgey previous owner mods making extra holes in it, tens of thousands of them are fine. However when a boat has screw-down teak deck planking on a balsa core the odds of problems become very high - hundreds of extra holes to fail. It's not insurmountable, just more work. It wouldn't really make a boat expensive unless you paid other people to deal with it.
I still wouldn't buy that one.
I have absolutely no idea, I'm not one of the major AWB advocates. She sounds like the kind of balance of old and new features that can be really good.So is my 1988 Jeanneau an AWB? She more closely resembles a MAB (Manky Auld Boat) and looks nothing like her modern contemporaries, with a relatively narrow stern, single wheel and rudder, and shaft drive. She does have a sugar scoop, although not a completely open transom.
Well in fairness we found her in a manky condition... four years in a Caribbean boatyard will do that.I have absolutely no idea, I'm not one of the major AWB advocates. She sounds like the kind of balance of old and new features that can be really good.
I doubt you leave her in "manky" condition and I really hate the assertion that older boats are. They often scrub up really nicely in my experience.
'Slipstream of Cowley'. Was used by the RAF Sailing Association for RORC races.These don't come up for sale often. Old but still a very capable classic up for grabs. Looks very underpriced or am I missing something?
Pardon our interruption...
I think a saildrive swap makes sense if the engineering is done by Corby. However the saildrive grp 'buck' is fairly large and has to be precisely shaped and bonded to a flattish area of the hull with fairly exact finishing dimensions. Easy enough for Corby to do but not sure i would be keen on trusting someone else to do it.I guess a saildrive swap makes sense ... glass in the engine/saildrive bed and cut a hole in the hull.
Probably getting more and more of a faff to find reconditioned v-drives or spare parts which is probably what was originally fitted given the engine location. It's what Corby Yachts are doing with their Contessa 38.
View attachment 206412
... there's life in the old dog yet![]()