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![]() wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: Nice write up. However the boat is very slow for a cruiser and is extremely overpriced. More than fast enough for a 34-foot cruiser in the Pacific NW. And don't forget, boats sell for more $$$ in the Pacific NW than almost anywhere else in the county. A top end speed of 20 knots is slow for a cruiser. I wonder it has to be at WOT to remain on plane. The price is justified by the nearly new diesels and the immaculate shape.......(IMO). Current owner has spent almost $80,000 in upgrades over the last four years- and while you never get that back it does make the boat worth at least a little more than an "average" boat of this age. I agree, to a point. It may be worth $55k, certainly not $80. A sistership with high hour twin 454's, faded gelcoat, and in "average condition" would probably bring $40,000 or so in the current Pacific NW market- I would guess. Figure that the market is punishing an average boat probably 15-25% right now if it's equipped with really thirsty gassers, and you're back up to $50,000. Figure a $10,000 premium for diesel, a $5,000 premium for low hours, and a $10,000 premium for virtually bristol and you're probably up to a price that would buy the boat. The extras are nice and make the boat more desireable, but you give them way too much credit. If it takes all that math to get up to "a price that would buy the boat", why is that such a deal? Because you would be unlikely to find a better example of this boat for sale anyplace. It's always cheaper to buy somebody else's upgrades for half price or less than to start with a beat up old boat and fool yourself into believing that a few grand here and a few grand there would change it from a "5" to a "10". Only a fool would throw $80 grand at a 22 year old 34 foot Wellcraft. |
#2
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In article , jimh_osudad@yahooDOT
says... wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: Nice write up. However the boat is very slow for a cruiser and is extremely overpriced. More than fast enough for a 34-foot cruiser in the Pacific NW. And don't forget, boats sell for more $$$ in the Pacific NW than almost anywhere else in the county. A top end speed of 20 knots is slow for a cruiser. I wonder it has to be at WOT to remain on plane. Where do you come up with these assumptions? A decent hull in that length will get on a plane at 12 to 14 kts. I expect that'd be in the 60 to 70% of WOT. jps |
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