pvb
Well-Known Member
I disagree about having more modern boats as the higher freeboards and lighter displacement make them more skittish than something that sits in the water rather than on it. At Southampton boat show a couple of years ago I looked at a Dufour 32 and had to leave as the motion in the choppy water made it uncomfortable. Also wide flat transoms can slap waves in at a mooring or anchorage.
I had a similar decision for a choice of boat and similar budget. Eventually I decided on a Westerly Fulmar and am spending a lot on bringing her up to a modern standard. When finished my boat will have only cost a third of what a new boat would have cost.
Yet again we have the myth of new boats being "lighter displacement". If they are actually lighter, it's because they are more scientifically constructed, rather than the old regime of a man wandering around with a bucket of resin slapping a bit more here and there. But are they actually lighter? Just as an example, a Dufour 32 from a couple of years ago would weigh about 4700kg; a Westerly Fulmar weighs about 4500kg. So, not a lighter displacement.
Spending money on old boats is fine, but it's largely money down the drain, as the resale value is dictated by the market, not by what anyone might have spent on it.