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I think you made a good decision! On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 15:33:23 GMT, Charlie Brown wrote: I've decided against this boat. I think you all are right. Better to spend more money on something that is less likely to require a ton of money. On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 13:43:56 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing wrote: On Fri, 25 Nov 2005 13:54:43 GMT, Charlie Brown wrote: Someone is selling a 1972 Orlando Clipper for $1600. It is in good condition with an 1986 trailer and Johnson 70 hp motor. At this price, run as quickly as you can away from it. The major problems with these boats are the floor and transom. The transoms usually rot from the bottom and chances are if the floor had to be replaced, then the transom is probably rotten. If you are hot to trot on this, take a good close look for rot, grab the skeg of the outboard and lift it and move it from side-to-side. If there is any movement in the transom it's junk and not worth it. Tap the transom and see if there are any "dead" spots - if there are, then it's junk. Look for weeping around the drain plug hole - if any, it's junk. Get somebody in the 250 lb class to walk around inside the boat to check the floor - most likely they only replaced the floor and not the stringers - they are probably also toast. Most of these boats used a balsa core for the fiberglass along the bottom and once that gets even slightly wet, it's toast. Tap the bottom and see what it sounds like. If it sounds dead, it's toast. The engine, depending on the year, may be ok - do the usual, compression checks, general condition, look for water in the gear case, etc. Anything wrong like unbalanced compression or it won't start (you should at least run the engine), then forget it. The trailer is a trailer - maybe worth $300 if it's in exceptional shape. Based on a further post, your budget allows you to purchase a much better boat without having to go through the hassle of "refurbishing" this one. Trust me on this - boat projects always cost three times what you have budgeted - that's just the way it is. For a boat like this, it's not worth even the purchase price. If everything is fine and dandy and it actually is sound, offer $400 and start from there. If it goes over $500, forget about it. Good luck. Tom -- John H "It's not a *baby* kicking, beautiful bride, it's just a fetus!" A Famous Self-obsessed Hypocrite |
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