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#11
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I think the seller should incur the cost.
what you think may or may not be interesting to you and your family, but what the industry thinks is how things are done. The buyer pays, or not as is his/her wish. But no cash, no splash. |
#12
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If you buy the boat, the seller should absorbe the cost of the survey.
horse hockey, bald one. baldycotton2@mchsi------- .comedy ------- Date: 8/19/2004 8:26 PM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: Far as I can tell, someone wrote: We've spoken to a marine surveyor we might hire who says that the engine can be tested to some extent on land but that we really should put the boat in the water and check it out. So I guess your surveyor isn't Harry. He's never been out on a boat. Seems reasonable - but my question is one about procedure. Who usually pays for the marina to put boat in and take it out again in such a case - buyer or seller? If you buy the boat, the seller should absorbe the cost of the survey. If you don't buy it, you do. |
#13
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#14
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If the boat won't start or run for sea trial, it
doesn't take a mechanical genius to assess its general operating condition. on the other hand, if the boat is on shore, it is the buyer's responsibility to pay for launching for a sea trial. If you are not interested enough in a boat to launch it, you ain't interested. btw, ***most*** squatheads who purposely intend to chisel on price use a "survey" (paid for by them to expressly find vague, impossible to prove reasons why the price *must* be lower.) Any broker worth his salt weeds those turds out, or at least gets the turd to offer a much higher price than the owner will accept, knowing the turd will chisel. Usually, turds end up paying above what the owner will accept just because the broker is ****ed at the idgit. |
#15
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but normally at that point, the seller
becomes more motivated so if problems are found, a formerly firm price becomes amazingly negotiable (unless the seller is a complete idiot). snicker, snicker, snicker. so the broker wants the chiseling buyer -- whom he despises as an incompetent turd trying to steal something -- to believe. screw with a broker and he/she will screw you back. and he/she has seen every screwer type on the planet. It ain't an even match. And it shouldn't be even. That is the service a broker offers to a seller. Insulation from the sniveling fools trying to steal. |
#16
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btw, ***most*** squatheads who purposely intend to chisel on price use a
"survey" (paid for by them to expressly find vague, impossible to prove reasons why the price *must* be lower.) Any broker worth his salt weeds those turds out, or at least gets the turd to offer a much higher price than the owner will accept, knowing the turd will chisel. Usually, turds end up paying above what the owner will accept just because the broker is ****ed at the idgit. I can't believe my eyes. "Any broker worth his salt will weed out the 'turds' insisting on a survey?" Such a broker would be sweeping out the grade school for mini-wage within a couple of months |
#17
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If the seller is not willing to pay to have the boat put in the water for a
test run (and allow the survey to occur while in the water the same day), then he is not interested in selling the boat. I would never pay at a marina to have a boat put in the water so I can test drive it when the boat is stored there. As others have stated, buyer pays for the survey. Seller pays to get it in the water for a test and the fuel (you should not be burning much fuel on a test run of maybe a couple miles). Now if your planning on doing a test drive on say Saturday and the survey will not occur until another day - you would need to possibly pay for the second put-in for the surveyor. You should coordinate so all occurs the same day. I have sold several boats and I have always towed it to the lake and paid to launch for the test ride. -- Tony my boats at http://t.thomas.home.mchsi.com "vze3j5ge" wrote in message ... My husband and I are considering purchase of a used boat - currently out of the water at our marina. We've spoken to a marine surveyor we might hire who says that the engine can be tested to some extent on land but that we really should put the boat in the water and check it out. Seems reasonable - but my question is one about procedure. Who usually pays for the marina to put boat in and take it out again in such a case - buyer or seller? Thanks for any help. Elaine |
#18
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gene, you are dumber than squat. stay out of this discussion. adults are
talking. From: "Gene Kearns" Date: 8/19/2004 9:37 PM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On 20 Aug 2004 01:19:09 GMT, (JAXAshby) wrote: gene, knock it off for the criminy sakes. dood, you have no touch with the world. Have you EVER bought a boat, used? I suspect, that if money changes hands, cost for hauling should be borne by the seller You sort of missed the last part of that sentence, didn't you? You know, that part about, "...and reimbursed by the buyer. " Attention span not your long suit? -- Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Southport, NC. http://myworkshop.idleplay.net/cavern/ Homepage http://www.southharbourvillageinn.com/directions.asp Where Southport,NC is located. http://www.southharbourvillageinn.linksysnet.com Real Time Pictures at My Marina http://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguide |
#20
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tony, you are lost to this world. give up you dream of one day owning a
plywood rowboat. From: "Tony Thomas" Date: 8/19/2004 9:36 PM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: HAcVc.2779$9d6.1649@attbi_s54 If the seller is not willing to pay to have the boat put in the water for a test run (and allow the survey to occur while in the water the same day), then he is not interested in selling the boat. I would never pay at a marina to have a boat put in the water so I can test drive it when the boat is stored there. As others have stated, buyer pays for the survey. Seller pays to get it in the water for a test and the fuel (you should not be burning much fuel on a test run of maybe a couple miles). Now if your planning on doing a test drive on say Saturday and the survey will not occur until another day - you would need to possibly pay for the second put-in for the surveyor. You should coordinate so all occurs the same day. I have sold several boats and I have always towed it to the lake and paid to launch for the test ride. -- Tony my boats at http://t.thomas.home.mchsi.com "vze3j5ge" wrote in message ... My husband and I are considering purchase of a used boat - currently out of the water at our marina. We've spoken to a marine surveyor we might hire who says that the engine can be tested to some extent on land but that we really should put the boat in the water and check it out. Seems reasonable - but my question is one about procedure. Who usually pays for the marina to put boat in and take it out again in such a case - buyer or seller? Thanks for any help. Elaine |
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