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On Thu, 07 Jun 2007 09:04:20 -0400, Jeff wrote:
* Vic Smith wrote, On 6/7/2007 12:02 AM: Yeah, they really hold their price. Do they? I just looked a YachtWorld and there were several about 5 years old that were 2/3 the price of a new one - and that includes a trailer and a big engine. This is a myth. May be. But if you look at the prices for some of the older ones, I bet they actually list them at more than they cost new. Remember that anything prior to '95 isn't a X/M. Anyway, the listed price isn't necessarily the real cost, so you may be right. 1. Even if the owner gets tired or "sailing," he still has a decently fuel economical and trailerable powerboat, with about the same cabin space of a $75k Bayliner. But about 18'' draft. Leave mast and sails at home. Some do that, and look at it as powerboat only. There are much, much better powerboats, including the Bayliner. And are you sure about that comparison, or are you just parroting someone else's comment? The Bayliner will carry more people further and faster and in much more comfort than the Mac. And it only draws 20". Yeah, I'm parroting somebody on the Mac group who was looking at Bayliners for boating/weekending with his wife and kids. He did some research, and what he said was all reasonable. It's easy enough to verify. Most of those Bayliners (one of my kids had one) have 350's and are real gas hogs. Never looked myself. 2. Macs normally don't have holding tanks/stinking hoses, don't smell like ****, and don't have **** floating in the bilge. Are you seriously claiming that having to use a porta-pottie is a major advantage? This is sounding a lot like the mac is the boat for people who never want to use a boat. No, just that about every cruising log I've read has multiple instances of plumbing failures and **** fouling the boat. Maybe sailors just don't make good plumbers. Personally, even though I *was* a plumber, I'd probably go with an Airhead, and stow an extra **** tank if necessary. They're expensive, but probably less costly in the long run. And didn't the factory have to add an inspection port so you could tell if water was accumulating in the bilge? And wasn't that because the boat would be dangerously unstable with too much bilge water? Lot's of ways to find something to criticize with any boat. That's one. The stability stuff is overblown. Wood is just a matter of style - most boats nowadays have very little outside wood; mine has none. Some folks just love to spend time rubbing teak. But for anything but a liveaboard I don't like any more wood below than necessary. Darkens the quarters, demands care and covers the mechanicals. For the kind of boat use I have in mind a spartan boat is better. 6. They are recent - the oldest X is '95, M 2002(?) OK. Its pretty funny to see the same broker list a new boat at 37K and a four year old boat at under 22K while you're claiming they "hold their value." That 37K broker price means nothing. What it cost to buy and equip a new boat - Mac or other - isn't a secret. In looking at many ads and reading accounts it seems to me the Mac does real well with resale value, but frankly I haven't priced many boats that are somewhat comparable, because there just aren't many out there. I'd pay a nice premium for a boat that had just simple Mac amenities, gunkholing ability and known good glass, but better sailing performance. I'd like a small diesel myself, since I'm not interested in speeding about. Outside of multi-hulls, a knee-deep anchorage boat with some space aboard will never sail as well as a keel. But they will sail, and are economical to move, if slowly. 8. They sail at the low end of performance. Some sailors modify them to reach moderate sailing performance in most but light air. whatever - certainly there are a few who have stripped them out and sail without ballast, but is this a reason to buy one??? One guy has a custom weighted daggerboard, custom rudders, sails, rigging mods, etc. He keeps the ballast full, since only hot dogs do otherwise because you *will* get knocked down. Don't know what it's cost him, but he's having a lot of fun sailing SF Bay in 30kt air. Points to 45, but an aft quartering sea sometimes knocks him sideways putting him in broach mode. Light boat with no keel, and you can't escape that. Most of those "advantages" don't hold up to close inspection. With the exception of being able to use the large engine, they are not much different from other trailer sailers, except that the don't sail as nicely. MacGregor did not invent the concept of a simple boat with an outboard engine. Yeah, I've heard that before. I clipped a list of trailer sailers names Doug had in a post, and went looking for them. Most were 25-40 years old sitting in backyards with birds nesting in them. But if you've got recommendations for gunkholers I'm all ears. And I'm not keen about trailerable. I might even pay to keep a trailerable waterside so I don't have to haul it around. The trailerables are just commonly gunkholers and relatively inexpensive. If I had my druthers I'd like more beam and length than the trailerables. But trailerables still fit, since my aim is Florida west coast key and sandbar excursions, and some Gulf fishing. Couple weeks at a time. Three weeks max. Are you sure? I saw some with an asking price under 15K. Without the big engine maybe you could get one for 12. That would be great, but I haven't run across that. Anyway, like I remember Capt'n Neal saying on his website - don't pay an arm and a leg for your first sailboat. Good advice. I've read quite a bit on the Mac forum, and boy do I envy those guys. Super-cool bunch too. Polite and helpful. You mean like boaters almost everywhere, except at ASA? heh heh If that's where you want to go, you need shallow draft. If you want to sail in the ocean, you'll be happier with a real keel. There are many older trailer sailers that can be had on any budget, if that what you want. You can also get a keel boat pretty cheap that doesn't need to be gutted. Yep, the shallow draft is tops on my list. Probably will never do any ocean sailing. But who knows? I'm all talk right now. That why I appreciate hearing about sailing from all the real sailors here. Real people, with real sailing experience. Ain't that cool? I don't know, I just don't know. Maybe it's time to visit Capt'n Neal's website for some advice. I think he covers the best methods for a non-wealthy person to buy a boat. He's another polite and helpful guy. Sometimes. But remember, Neal lost his "unsinkable" boat. A mere temporary setback, I'm sure. Like Ed Gordon, he will sail again. --Vic |
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