Lakesailor
Well-Known Member
Answering my own question, it was Udo with his Koster (which it did, a lot) http://www.classicboat.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=270722
... I intended to ask simply "Why not the Vertue?" and got carried away.
One of the boats on my 'longlist' that I'm looking at next week is wooden. As the price of the boats I will be looking at are at the bottom end of the range a surveyor is a high portion of my spend. It's all the more important that I don't call him out to a 'dud' What are the main points I should be looking at in particular when I have that first speculative look at a wooden boat?
Do I stop when I see any indication of a top sides leak? Is a dry bilge a good sign? ( I think the wooden boat I'm looking at is in the water) can you readily tell a good boat from an bad one?
I cannot afford a specialist surveyor on every 6k boat I look at but would shell out after I've seen enough to consider a purchase. It might be seen as heresy here but I may not bother if it was a grp boat, never have yet!
On another related note - if I buy a wooden boat that has been in the water for some time, what is likely to happen when it's craned in after a winter on the hard next year?
Good to see they've always been so positive. You can still get teak, it just costs a lot. For an all teak Vertue today you'd probably spend over £100k just on timber in this country. That doesn't mean it can't be done though. If I was going to have a boat built of teak today I'd do it in India. I know of a chap who about five years ago had a 50 foot teak pilot cutter hull built out there for about £150k.The biggest single factor is, of course, labour.
I asked the Chief Instructor at the IBTC what we would be looking at to build an all teak Vertue. Just hull, deck and coachroof. Forget rig, sails, engine, electrics, deck fittings etc.
He said 'If you can get the wood - which you can't, and would have to use Iroko - about £150k'.
I have to say having done a bit of 'random' research you certainly seem to get allot of boat for your money...or should that be allot of headaches!
Simply an oversight - I will add it to the list...although as mentioned I would want reasonable accommodation and space to put a solid fuel fire...
...Can I suggest you think about cockpits amongst the other things. These won't be as comfortable or as large as modern yachts so make sure it is suitable for the number of crew you will have.
First thing to establish is how long the owner has had it, what has he done to it in his ownership along with paperwork ,ask to see the last available survey. Topsides shouldn't leak, nor for that matter should the hull below water. Any blackening or discolouration in varnish should be checked out. Any flaws in paintwork should be tapped to check for a solid ring and any rust coming through paintwork should also be checked.. Proof of age and maintenance of engine should be available. All basic enough stuff . If you like the boat and before you get a surveyor, ask the owner to dry it out and check below the waterline for corrosion of prop, check rudder fittings, look at hull/keel joint for signs of corrosion/weeping. Look at pipework/attachments and check seacocks are working. Make sure electrics are tidy looking and everything works. Then if you like it , negotiate a price subject to survey. Don't be afraid of wood,if its been maintained it will outlast any other type of construction.
Can I suggest you think about cockpits amongst the other things. These won't be as comfortable or as large as modern yachts so make sure it is suitable for the number of crew you will have.
By the way I do realise that GRP boats can have heating, but are they really as warm both literally and metaphorically..?...Only being able to use a boat for 8 or 9 Months a year seems a waste which is why I am beginning this project.
Charcoal heater in Saloon - Lovely - lend me £25k and you probably can!Wish I could help!