Not my old boat, which was a 44. Mine was sold to a fellow in NJ, I think. But I don't think it was the one the woman disappeared off. Wasn't that guy a public official or something, or am I confusing it with something else?
As I remember, it had a decent ride in a seaway, but was cold and damp inside and very noisy- about what you'd expect from an aluminum boat, I guess. Strikers were built by different yards- some in Norway, some in Chile. Mine was made by Fjellstrand Aluminum Yachts in Norway. It was very sturdily built, but really wasn't in good shape when I got it and required a lot of updates. With what I know now I would never have bought it, but I didn't know anything then.
They are tough boats, but any aluminum boat is maintenance intensive and you really have to know what you are doing. I didn't. Rebuilding a metal boat is even more demanding than doing a fiberglass one, and my hat is off to Quentin for what he's accomplished on the Roamer.
Quentin, you ought to tackle a Striker next. A 41 or 44 with a pair of QSM11s would be a real speed demon. Probably almost as fast as a 45 Hatteras with the same engines