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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Dec 2007 02:08:33 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote: No financing was involved, so there was no requirement for a survey from a bank. We did one anyway, even though it was new, and it was well worth it as I learned more about the boat than I ever would have learned from the dealer. I'll second that - although I think one can get carried away with surveys on new boats under say 25 feet. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Dec 19, 5:02 am, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: I'll second that - although I think one can get carried away with surveys on new boats under say 25 feet. Agreed, Tom. When I was considering buying my 23 ft. cuddie, somebody on here firmly suggested that I demand a survey and sea trial... For a boat I was going to give less than $2000.000 for? |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Dec 2007 05:16:54 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote: On Dec 19, 5:02 am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: I'll second that - although I think one can get carried away with surveys on new boats under say 25 feet. Agreed, Tom. When I was considering buying my 23 ft. cuddie, somebody on here firmly suggested that I demand a survey and sea trial... For a boat I was going to give less than $2000.000 for? I can understand as you are mechanically inclined and have no small knowledge of engines, transmissions and mechanical systems. For the average schmuck, even at $2000, inspections can be very important. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Wed, 19 Dec 2007 05:16:54 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: On Dec 19, 5:02 am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: I'll second that - although I think one can get carried away with surveys on new boats under say 25 feet. Agreed, Tom. When I was considering buying my 23 ft. cuddie, somebody on here firmly suggested that I demand a survey and sea trial... For a boat I was going to give less than $2000.000 for? I can understand as you are mechanically inclined and have no small knowledge of engines, transmissions and mechanical systems. For the average schmuck, even at $2000, inspections can be very important. Well Tom, I woudl say that with a $200,000.00 craft, then yes. But if a person is afraid they're going to waste 2K on a runabout, then they probably don't have any business boating anyhow. Not saying they shouldn't boat, but ..... |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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#6
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Dave Hall" wrote in message ... Wow, I have never had a boat surveyed and have never had any problem getting insurance. Of course my boats are more along the line above (one was worth about $4,000, another about $6,000. Both were 19 ft cuddys). One boat was totaled in Ivan less than a couple months after buying it and the insurance company didn't bat an eye paying for it. Of course I think they paid more to have the damn thing drug out of the woods along a desolate part of the river bank and hauled out of the river to a junk yard than they paid me for the boat ;-) Dave Hall Both of our boats (the Navigator and the Grand Banks) are insured by a major, international marine underwriter. A survey was not required for either boat to get insurance as best as I can recall. We may have sent copies anyway, to document the boats' equipment inventories and to provide engine serial numbers and stuff, but I don't recall a survey as being specifically required to obtain coverage. The coverage includes replacement cost, $2 million liability, damage by uninsured others, fuel spill and, surprisingly, storm and or ice damage during storage (assuming certain precautions are taken). They also cover half the cost of emergency hauling in the event of severe storms, which I didn't know until I read the policy carefully the other day. Years ago with smaller boats I originally got "insurance" as a low cost rider on our home owner's policy. Then I found out it covers next to nothing, including fuel spills, which scared the bananas out of me. You don't want to be uninsured for fuel spills, have an "event" and then have the Fed coming after you for reimbursement. Eisboch |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Eisboch" wrote in message ... "Dave Hall" wrote in message ... Wow, I have never had a boat surveyed and have never had any problem getting insurance. Of course my boats are more along the line above (one was worth about $4,000, another about $6,000. Both were 19 ft cuddys). One boat was totaled in Ivan less than a couple months after buying it and the insurance company didn't bat an eye paying for it. Of course I think they paid more to have the damn thing drug out of the woods along a desolate part of the river bank and hauled out of the river to a junk yard than they paid me for the boat ;-) Dave Hall Both of our boats (the Navigator and the Grand Banks) are insured by a major, international marine underwriter. A survey was not required for either boat to get insurance as best as I can recall. We may have sent copies anyway, to document the boats' equipment inventories and to provide engine serial numbers and stuff, but I don't recall a survey as being specifically required to obtain coverage. The coverage includes replacement cost, $2 million liability, damage by uninsured others, fuel spill and, surprisingly, storm and or ice damage during storage (assuming certain precautions are taken). They also cover half the cost of emergency hauling in the event of severe storms, which I didn't know until I read the policy carefully the other day. Years ago with smaller boats I originally got "insurance" as a low cost rider on our home owner's policy. Then I found out it covers next to nothing, including fuel spills, which scared the bananas out of me. You don't want to be uninsured for fuel spills, have an "event" and then have the Fed coming after you for reimbursement. Eisboch And if you have a small cheaper boat, you probably only get liability insurance, and since the company is not paying for boat loss, probably no survey needed. My boat cost $20k in 1995 and is probably worth $25k now. New motor and a T-8 kicker added. And the replacement boats like mine are now $50-75k. BoatUS has never asked for a survey. |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Calif Bill" wrote in message ... "Eisboch" wrote in message ... "Dave Hall" wrote in message ... Wow, I have never had a boat surveyed and have never had any problem getting insurance. Of course my boats are more along the line above (one was worth about $4,000, another about $6,000. Both were 19 ft cuddys). One boat was totaled in Ivan less than a couple months after buying it and the insurance company didn't bat an eye paying for it. Of course I think they paid more to have the damn thing drug out of the woods along a desolate part of the river bank and hauled out of the river to a junk yard than they paid me for the boat ;-) Dave Hall Both of our boats (the Navigator and the Grand Banks) are insured by a major, international marine underwriter. A survey was not required for either boat to get insurance as best as I can recall. We may have sent copies anyway, to document the boats' equipment inventories and to provide engine serial numbers and stuff, but I don't recall a survey as being specifically required to obtain coverage. The coverage includes replacement cost, $2 million liability, damage by uninsured others, fuel spill and, surprisingly, storm and or ice damage during storage (assuming certain precautions are taken). They also cover half the cost of emergency hauling in the event of severe storms, which I didn't know until I read the policy carefully the other day. Years ago with smaller boats I originally got "insurance" as a low cost rider on our home owner's policy. Then I found out it covers next to nothing, including fuel spills, which scared the bananas out of me. You don't want to be uninsured for fuel spills, have an "event" and then have the Fed coming after you for reimbursement. Eisboch And if you have a small cheaper boat, you probably only get liability insurance, and since the company is not paying for boat loss, probably no survey needed. My boat cost $20k in 1995 and is probably worth $25k now. New motor and a T-8 kicker added. And the replacement boats like mine are now $50-75k. BoatUS has never asked for a survey. Seems like I remember BoatUS requiring a "self-survey" to obtain their insurance. Basically a form you filled out. Eisboch |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Dec 2007 17:53:23 -0800, "Calif Bill"
wrote: "Eisboch" wrote in message ... "Dave Hall" wrote in message ... Wow, I have never had a boat surveyed and have never had any problem getting insurance. Of course my boats are more along the line above (one was worth about $4,000, another about $6,000. Both were 19 ft cuddys). One boat was totaled in Ivan less than a couple months after buying it and the insurance company didn't bat an eye paying for it. Of course I think they paid more to have the damn thing drug out of the woods along a desolate part of the river bank and hauled out of the river to a junk yard than they paid me for the boat ;-) Dave Hall Both of our boats (the Navigator and the Grand Banks) are insured by a major, international marine underwriter. A survey was not required for either boat to get insurance as best as I can recall. We may have sent copies anyway, to document the boats' equipment inventories and to provide engine serial numbers and stuff, but I don't recall a survey as being specifically required to obtain coverage. The coverage includes replacement cost, $2 million liability, damage by uninsured others, fuel spill and, surprisingly, storm and or ice damage during storage (assuming certain precautions are taken). They also cover half the cost of emergency hauling in the event of severe storms, which I didn't know until I read the policy carefully the other day. Years ago with smaller boats I originally got "insurance" as a low cost rider on our home owner's policy. Then I found out it covers next to nothing, including fuel spills, which scared the bananas out of me. You don't want to be uninsured for fuel spills, have an "event" and then have the Fed coming after you for reimbursement. Eisboch And if you have a small cheaper boat, you probably only get liability insurance, and since the company is not paying for boat loss, probably no survey needed. My boat cost $20k in 1995 and is probably worth $25k now. New motor and a T-8 kicker added. And the replacement boats like mine are now $50-75k. BoatUS has never asked for a survey. I had my Proline covered for boat loss, but no survey was required. -- John H |
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