Sky, I also thought they did a great job on that boat also, but it has been for sale for quite awhile. John
According to the magazine article in the brochure archives here, it cruises at 9 knots @ 1,400RPM while burning 8GPH total. I could live with that. Did I mention my birthday is in October, and that I'm up for adoption?
Gotta wonder what it would take to buy that one. I keep watching that damn video!
Those numbers are very close based upon one year experience with my 58 LRC. I do not have Flowscans or other real time fuel flow monitoring, but was based upon a 1700 mile trip with one fuel stop.
Sir, if that is your Burger "Glory" in the background she is beautiful.
She is a indeed beautiful vessel - classic looks both outside and inside. A few things bother me, though - the first being the 2 generators without sound shields as I would have thought the noise from DDC 20kW in particular would be very intrusive. Second, the Detroit Diesels even with a zero hours rebuild have 1360+ hours on them - how long would they be expected to reliably continue in service (though they were used in the past, they are not common engines in Europe). I could see this vessel being a great retirement cruiser for the Bahamas and West Indies - not so much in Europe due to the cost of diesel (£1.25/$1.40 per litre at last count) so even filling up once a year would be an expensive, even in Gibraltar which IIRC has the cheapest diesel in Europe.
Anyway, I can still dream.
I come from a sailing background so spending anything more than a few hundred dollars to fill up makes me baulk. It's a cultural thing that I will have to get over - I have various flexibility (not strength) issues related to arthritis that mean a sailboat is out of the question for me 'cos nowadays I simply couldn't manage the heavy work involved ,especially in heavy weather, so a trawler - single or twin - would seem to be the way forward. Bite the bullet and all that!1360 hours on 671n's is nothing. They could easily reach 10,000hrs or maybe even 20,000 before the next rebuild. And parts are available anywhere in the world.
If you can't afford the fuel, you probably can't afford the boat. Fuel, even at those prices, would still be the cheapest part of owning and maintaining the boat.
Interesting - I have heard opposing views on this subject. For, is the fact that a good well designed enclosure will have little or no effect on the drive engine despite the potential for higher temperatures in and around it. On the other hand, it is easy to miss a change on sound caused by a fault/imbalance in the drive engine which would mean that potential problems could go un-detected. Personally, it would be a shielded gennie for me - excluding from a few manufacturers producing very small 'packages' - I would make sure servicing/oil changes and checks were carried out and in a large boat have a backup, preferably identical model to cut down on the number of spares and service packs needing to be carried on long cruises.Sound shields, although I have them, are the death of generators .
Sound shields, although I have them, are the death of generators .
Hey Sky...been following this thread for years and I wonder ..... Would you have any estimate on what the yearly cost of maintenance for a boat like this... minus the insurance ,dock fee?
$15,000 a year ...$10,000?
How less to a 58 or 48 long range cruiser
Thanks
Mailman Jim
it also depends on how much maintenance you can do yourself. a 1500 dollar oil change can be done by yourself for less than half if you are capable. my yard charges 10 each to install zincs plus the price of the zincs. i have 6 zincs so i save 60 dollars and do it while they are painting the bottom. just changed 4 pieces of exhaust, took my about 6 hours, 100 dollars an hour, just saved 600 dollars