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Cruisers Yacht vs Sea Ray vs Four Winns
Any comments on relative merits of these brands?
I am looking at the 30 foot range. Cruisers new 300 and the Four Winns 298. Also considering a Sea Ray 300. Quality? Resale? etc |
its me wrote: Any comments on relative merits of these brands? I am looking at the 30 foot range. Cruisers new 300 and the Four Winns 298. Also considering a Sea Ray 300. Quality? Resale? etc Not personally all that familiar with Four Winns, but Cruisers and Sea Ray are both good choices. (As Four Winns may be as well). On a well made boat, a lot of "quality" issues are subjective. Be sure that any builder will point out the specific areas where their company excels, (or at least does something very different), and tell you that "quality" is the result of....(insert specific thing here). If a boat is well made, there can be a number of different approaches that will result in a quality job. Let's say that brick homes are often considered higher "quality" than stick-built- that doesn't mean that a stick-built home can't be high quality or that all brick homes are automatically superior to stick-built......and it's much the same with boats. Sometimes other people (not you) set out to buy a boat with a mindset that most of the stuff available is just pure crap- but there will be that one, single, exception actually worthy of their hard earned bucks. Funny thing is that equally intelligent people approach the problem of finding the "one, pure boat" with equal research and diligence- and will wind up with wildly different conclusions. The good news is that the vast majority of boats offered for sale are fundamentally sound vessels that should provide some sort of acceptable and safe performance when used with common sense in an appropriate application. If you're considering gasoline engines (a huge component on a boats like you're comparing) we can accept going in that there will be very few important differences in machinery. "What's the better entree, halibut or salmon?" As far as resale goes, why worry? If you expect to be reselling the boat in a couple of years in order to purchase "MODEL X" instead, it makes a lot more sense to purchase MODEL X right now. MODEL X will simply continue to go up in price while you wait, (adding additional dollars to the ultimate cost), while the "make-do" boat will likely depreciate at least 20% the first year (and 40-50% within 5 years) and that simply adds additonal dollars to the final cost of MODEL X. You will have the expenses associated with two purchases as well as one sale. Boats are lousy investments, from a financial perspective, but excellent lifestyle enhancers. Boats that cost a lot more new usually bring a lot more used, but depreciation as a percentage of original purchase price won't vary wildly. One reason for that is that new boat markups are fairly standard throughout the industry- and that accounts for that rule of thumb 20% depreciation the first year. Your one-year-old "used" boat will be competing against left-over blowouts that are still "new", and a year-old resale will need to offered for less than the wholesale cost of a new boat if you hope to attract a buyer. One other bit of advice on resale: Pick a brand that has strong representation in your area and is in demand. While it is true that most boats depreciate at roughly about the same percentage rates, if you've got some boat that you hauled in from four states away and that few people in your locale are familiar with you may find local demand artificially depressed at resale time- Good luck with your decision. Most of it will be subjective, (as in layout, options, etc) but it sounds like you're picking from some decent boats to begin with. |
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