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On Dec 1, 10:01 am, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote: "Gogarty" wrote in message ... Congratulations on your gift. It is the gift that will keep on taking. This probably is not very helpful. But your budget of $15,000 will get you nowhere. Get a survey. Ignore Wilbur. If you want to insure the boat you will have to get one anyway. Then resign yourself to the fact that you will have $30,000 in that boat within the year. Heed the voice of experience with a surveyed 1976 Dawson 26. And that was twenty-five years ago. You could read all about it in an article entitled "We'll never fall in love again" in a magazine called "Messing About in Boats," long defunct. No, don't get a survey. Ignore bad advice from the likes of Gogarty. You have the boat already. The first thing you should do is sail it. That is the only way you'll be able to find out what things need fixing and what things don't, what things you'd like to upgrade and what things don't need upgrading and suit you just fine the way they are. The likes of Gogarty represent the "tinkerers" whose pleasure in life comes from constantly working on and tinkering with things based upon the theoretical and not the practical. These are the folks you see at a dock or in a vacant lot spending thousands of hours working on a boat that looks real purdy but never has been in the water since they acquired it. Chances are it never will be anything more than a project boat. Real sailors are practical people who have as their first priority sailing and they upgrade and change and repair on the basis of real need and not perceived need. Real sailors only spend their valuable time working on things that NEED to be worked on and they find this out by sailing, not by theorizing or paying for advice from some fool who has never sailed the boat and never will. Surveyors are big piles of steaming dung, IMO. They arrogantly set foot aboard a boat propped up in a yard and they pretend to know how it will sail and what it needs to make it sail better. The only worse idiot is somebody who pays a surveyor good money to theorize about what needs changing. Imagine paying somebody to evaluate your home theater stereo system without ever having turned it on and listened to it? Sail the boat. Learn what needs to be changed. Change it. It's that simple. This doesn't apply to every boat, just small, simple sailboats like your Sabre 28. You can handle it yourself. Save your money and spend it on things that matter. Take responsibility for your own. That is the true nature and calling of any human being. Wilbur Hubbard "Upgrading the engine costs $8-12000", What? I bought a used 13 hp diesel for $2000 and installed it myself for nearly free. I might understand the biZarro cost if the person paid someone else to do all the work but if you are going to cruise you better know how to do t yourself. This person should read what David Pascoe says about gasoline engines on sailboats before changing it out. I agree with him that there is no reason to change out an older working gasoline engine for diesel. |
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