bowler
Well-Known Member
A folder full of paperwork. Plus, if private, a seller who clearly knows the boat inside and out is a good sign.
just google , if you said budget , we could all help more most would recommend diesel, or if petrol boat with out board .Based in West Mids, and no not the Brighton boat. Tell me more? Do you have a link?
He did mention he was leaning towards a 1998 USA sportsboat, which will certainly be inboard and will not be diesel!If you mentioned your budget it might help
just google , if you said budget , we could all help more most would recommend diesel, or if petrol boat with out board .
If you mentioned your budget it might help
just google , if you said budget , we could all help more most would recommend diesel, or if petrol boat with out board
Yes I did. Although, a diesel is definitely preferred. All the boats I’ve been finding seem to mostly be inboard which is frustrating. I’m not set on a particular brand to be fair. My budget is £15-£20k, length no bigger than 8m, thats ideally a 4 berth, but 2 would be ok. As long as the important parts are working I don’t mind refurbing anything else, such as interiors etc as I have contacts for all that. I’m still very actively searching and won’t rush into it. Thank for the help guys!He did mention he was leaning towards a 1998 USA sportsboat, which will certainly be inboard and will not be diesel!
I love this! This is exactly where I’m at! I have so many tabs open on my Mac! I’ve certainly been doing my research! The RYA contract is a must for me too. I’ve already checked that through, so I’ll be using that if needed! Thanks for your advice. I hope you are enjoying your boatWas looking for our first boat 2 years ago. Looked at 10+ boats with brokers. The thought being it was safer going through a broker as its a lot of money to just hand directly to an owner. Most boats looked like they had been adondoned with the brokers in the hope they would eventually sell. Found one that looked perfect through a brokers, put a deposit on it. Had it surveyed and checked by a Volvo Penta specialist. It failed the survey for a number of reasons. Brokers agreed to return the deposit, which got painful getting them to actually return the money. Numerous calls, emails, which they kept ignoring. Eventually got the deposit back.
In the meantime saw an advert but, a private seller. I wasn't keen to even view it because it was a private seller. Painful enough dealing with a broker. Viewed the boat, wife loved it and the seller was very helpful, pointed out all the work he had done, had a genuine reason to be selling (health issues) and had stacks of paperwork, invoices going back years. Went away to think about it and look at another boat at a brokers, which he couldn't even get the engine hatch to open ( why do people abandon boats with brokers in need of work?)
Wife is fed up with looking at rubbish so says she wants the boat with the private seller, to be fair it'sher moneybut now my responsibility. Looked at how to do it, downloaded from the RYA a contract for purchase. Went to see the boat again and face to face agree with the owner how to do the purchase, the price and deposit, surveys etc. He was happy to use the RYA contract but offered to go through a solicitor if required.
Got the boat surveyed, a few things were picked up which the seller fixed at his expense. Paid for the boat whilst sat on it with owner. He saw the money being transferred, both of us happy, handshakes all round.
So, buying privately can work, but needs the right seller, the right paperwork, and some trust from both sides
Moody says hello. We are loving her. Good luck with the search and hopefully buyingI love this! This is exactly where I’m at! I have so many tabs open on my Mac! I’ve certainly been doing my research! The RYA contract is a must for me too. I’ve already checked that through, so I’ll be using that if needed! Thanks for your advice. I hope you are enjoying your boat![]()
I get to work on a lot of inboard powered boats and have run Mercruisers for 30 yrs, there are several things to check, one is that the drive shaft bellows on the drive have been replaced at 5 yr intervals, and check the exhaust manifolds and risers when the engine is hot especially if its just seawater cooled as these rust internally and get blocked. You should be able to place your hand on the riser without it being uncomfortably hot, if it is very hot there is a restriction in the manifold or riser and these aren’t cheap to replace. The other thing to check is that it goes in and out of gear without stalling otherwise the gear wire down to the drive needs replacing and setting up correctly. These can be bargaining points but if its your first boat I would recommend having someone with you on the test drive who knows these engines and can identify any problems.
I dont think that there is an agreed cut off in length, but the last thing you want in a smaller sports boat is a diesel engine.Yes I did. Although, a diesel is definitely preferred.
If thats true, thats silly on the brokers part. Imagine the miriad phone calls he'd get after delivery because x y and z have all gone wrong on the boat.Brokers seem happy to take anything now - poor quality, neglected and 30 years old… if they can charge for selling it….
There is one broker (who shall remain nameless) advertising a 1995 boat as “lovingly cared for and maintained with much money recently spent) where the last lift and service was 2022 and nothing spent since or any sign it’s been used….
So don’t assume that route gets you a better or even a more honestly described boat!
In this particular case it won’t get as far as “after handover” - the boat looks sort of ok but the minute you power it up you find few of the switches or gauges actually work and as mentioned the service history is seriously lacking! Not sure it will ever get to “handover” stage…If thats true, thats silly on the brokers part. Imagine the miriad phone calls he'd get after delivery because x y and z have all gone wrong on the boat.
osmosis /ŏz-mō′sĭs, ŏs-/hull osmosis