Buying first boat w/ 3 partners ?
On Sun, 17 Aug 2003 18:32:22 GMT, "BooBoo12321"
wrote:
I am thinking of buying a boat with 2 or 3 partners. At most, I'd use the
boat twice a week next summer (and same with the other partners) So
there's plenty of time for 3 or 4 people to share the boat.... And, of
course, this will spread docking, insurance, repair and storage costs 4
ways..... Any comments on this approach? Any hidden caveats? I am
carefully choosing the partners....(responsible, working friends w/ spare
money)
For now, we are looking at 19-22 foot Bowrider. Basically to lounge
around on for a few hours at a time...Maybe try some water-skiing.
Also, we aren't that boat savvy, and all fairly busy with careers, so we
don't want a repair lemon... Is it better to pay more up front, and get a
nicer, newer boat, rather than find a perceived deal, and start pouring
money into some old boat (and end up spending just as much , if not more)
To avoid "hidden startup charges", what are the most common "freebie"
accessories I should look for? (That aren't really factored into the
price) Stuff that I'd have to buy regardless.... Trailer, Cover,
lifejackets, marine radios?
I was told by an avid boatman to avoid mass produced boats, such as
Bayliner, SeaRay, Maxum, etc...He said these boats are not well built, and
the mechanics he spoke to are always fixing these.... Instead , he said to
find a boat like: Grady White, Boston Whaler, Pursuit, HydraSport, ProSport,
Edgewater.... What do you think of this? Also, he said it is MUCH better
to get a fully outboard motor. Much easier to service. Do not get I/O or
inboard. They are much more troublesome....He also said try to get a Jap.
motor, like Yamaha, Honda, Nissan....
What are your thoughts on these suggestions ? THANKS
I have to agree with Tony. For this size boat, buy your own. You
will have the luxury of using it whenever you want, and you won't have
to alienate friends trying to find out who dinged the prop, or left
the gas tank empty.
Good friends are more important than a boat, and there *will* be
conflicts.
My brother-in-law and I bought a small boat, many years ago, and got
along fine with it. My ex-wife, however, had a major problem
everytime my brother-in-law took the boat. "Why does he get it so
many weekends?", etc. The killer was that she hated boating, and
wouldn't go with me when she had the chance. I dumped the wife and
kept the boat.
Get a boat trailer combo, do your homework, and enjoy your boat.
noah
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