Geoffrey Mills
New member
I read this thread with interest - spanning it would appear over some 20 years! I note also the comment about the apparent absence of Westerly/Moody/Colvic owners. Well here are some comments from a 25 year owner of a 43 year old Conway. First the question of adequacy of scantlings. I'm a structural engineer and one of the things we are taught is that if a structure has survived quite a few decades and hence been through most design conditions then the structure is proven and we need only look for changes in loading or deterioration of condition. I think it is fair to say that with old boats like the Conway their structure is proven and the weaknesses well know to surveyors. So you know exactly what you are buying. I would always prefer to buy an old house, not recently decorated, for the same reason - I can see what I'm getting. The only structural defects that is commonly reported is the depression of the mast step and that can be dealt with. However, the hull/deck structure represents perhaps a third of the cost of a well-equipped boat and my Conway, probably typically, has required pretty much total renovation to bring her back to as-new condition. It would have been cheaper to have bought a new boat but my wife and I (with different priorities) could not find a new boat that matched our combined preferences as well as the Conway - which was our third boat and so we had time to work out what we wanted. We have been to a number of boat shows and crawled over a range of new boats and decided we prefer ours. Our preference for a ketch knocks out most of the competition; then I prefer a shaft drive with significant prop-wash thus avoiding the need for a bow-thruster; a deep centre cockpit; the issue of the low bridge-deck is dealt with by having a robust and lockable lower washboard; the lower internal volume for her length is for us a worthwhile trade-off for more sea-kindly motion in rougher conditions; the longish keel and well spread out keel bolts is reassuring when we periodically hit bottom (who does not?) ( I would prefer a lead keel); the rudder is well supported; the rig is conventional and generous; the accommodation is British standard with straight settees in the saloon and so suitable for sea-berths with lee cloths (and we have one pilot berth); a deep bilge in which we have second and independent water and fuel tanks and space for triple bilge pumps; I could go on but lets look at some weaknesses (other than the mast-step). In no particular order - the cockpit drain seacocks are accessible to operate below the main fuel tank but could not be changed without removing the tank, internal mouldings limited access to the inside of the hull and necessitated some work to add removable panels; it is a reasonable assumption on a boat of that age that sealants will be failing and so (in my case) all fastenings were remove and re-bedded and in most cases renewed; the main portlights were not opening and replacing them with opening lights involves some surgery as the coach-roof sides have a slight curvature; the emergency tiller operates on the rudder stock in the aft-cabin so the helmsman cannot see to steer - in my case I have a quadrant operated autopilot with two independent control systems; the original gas storage was unsafe and I had to fit a new storage system made with fire retardant resin and a below-deck access panel with intumescent seal; I had to fit holding tanks which did not come with the original; the resin used was susceptible to osmosis and so treatment (and retreatment after maybe a further 20 years) will likely be needed; fitting an electric windlass and a new -generation anchor will need more than minor work - in my case a new bow-roller assembly; the anchor locker is not self draining (the original design had it draining into the bilge) so to avoid a wet bilge mine has been altered to drain into a shower bilge and thus pumped out automatically. - that needs care to keep the chain reasonably clean before stowing; the boom does not have a traveller but is secured to a single mid-point ring (on a long tack I can rig a line from a spinnaker block to bring the boom in closer). I'll stop there but just conclude by saying that anyone who may (still!) be interested in a Conway or other Westerly can get this type of insight and feedback from the thousands of members of the very active Westerly Owners' Association and thus be assured of knowing exactly what they are buying and can expect. However, "each to their own" and I'm not saying a Conway is for you - just that it is for me.