Whitelighter
Well-Known Member
Anyone have any idea how much it would cost for a skipper and crew to bring a 33ft boat back from the eastern seaboard of the US to UK south coast?
Anyone have any idea how much it would cost for a skipper and crew to bring a 33ft boat back from the eastern seaboard of the US to UK south coast?
Thats quite a range.
What sort of extra stuff do you envisage?
+ 2k -3k for wear and tear on sales and ropes.
Anyone have any idea how much it would cost for a skipper and crew to bring a 33ft boat back from the eastern seaboard of the US to UK south coast?
It's a long shot at 33' but will it fit into a container? If not deck cargo on a ship is still probably your best option.
Honestly, I'd be suprised if the engine was used much, the boat is much quicker under sail in all but the lightest air, and I would expect the crew to sail where possible. Engine is about 7 knts, sail anything up to 20knts+ dependant on wind speed/direction
Dragonfly 1000R trimaran
I think that wear on sail and sail fittings ammounts to quite a bit, seeing as they are up and working for 500hrs on an average crossing. I've had goose necks, kicker fittings, batten pockets, rudder bearings, ruddder cables, chafe wear, halyards worn through in one crossing, and in normal weekend cruising terms probably 5 years sail wear. All just a guess from experience, but that was my budget during long term cruises for repairs after a 4 week passage. Maybe high but it meant we always had spare for running repairs and updates.
Hmmm. Not perhaps the most rugged of boats. Not perhaps the most tolerant of weight. One would certainly want a delivery skipper and a small crew who are multihull/trimaran experienced. I'm sure there are some MOCRA wannabes willing to 'talk a good fight'....
I s'pose if Rory McDougall can sail a 21' Wharram cat each way across the Atlantic, solo, then a 10 metre Dragonfly ought to be practicable - but maybe not at 22 knots!
Have you explored the insurance issue?![]()