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On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 19:12:25 -0700, jps wrote:
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 14:27:25 -0400, Captain Wizard of Woodstock wrote: On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 08:20:07 -0700 (PDT), wf3h wrote: The gospel is that one gets a survey done. Has anyone found this useful, apart from your own experience looking at a boat, especially for cheap ($10K) boat? Is it worth it to get a survey done since on a 28' boat this costs about $600 in the NY area. Well, let me put it this way. I'm pretty familiar with problems and such as far as the hull goes and I'm handy around engines - know what to look for in a general sense. A few years back, I became really interested in a early model Topaz 28' sportfisherman - twin 350s. I looked that boat over for three days before I committed to buy it - put the 10% down and called a surveyor, set up an appointment and off we went. He spent a whole five minutes before the $13,000 deal was off. That should tell you something. Do what you will, but it can be money well spent. And they aren't as vague as you seem to believe - their rep is on the line and they have to tell it like it is or they are going to get insurance companies on their asses if something happens. What did he catch? No baffles in the exhaust, sea water had gotten up into the engines and they were siezed solid. Never got beyond the stern. :) |
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