MikeP said:
Well, I can't believe this has happened twice in a few days but...I agree with Randy.
I'll leave that comment alone in the interest of staying on topic!
I believe most buyers looking at these boats will want the oem engines in them, not repowers. Several years ago, when we were shopping I was told about a 53 that had some sort of repower - can't recall what engines. The broker told us their were no offers on the boat at all. He pretty much summed it up by saying - "If someone is looking for an old Hatteras, they want to see Detroits in there."
I'm not sure I subscribe to this....my boat was re-powered when I purchased her, and I saw it as a benefit, after I checked out the effort. Done right, it's not rocket science to see it as a benefit. Making sure it has been done right might be more of a concern. In my case, a friend turned me onto someone that knew this hull, and confirmed it was capable of the upgrade. The surveyor confirmed that the installation had been done right.
To use Randy's analogy, if I'm buying a 1974 Norton Commando, I don't want a Honda engine in it. The reality is, most buyers of this sort of boat that want a repower, would rather buy the boat in it's oem form and do the repower themselves. That way, they know what they've got. If you buy an old Hatt with a non-DD engine, you have to make a SERIOUS assumption that everything that had to be changed from what Hatt designed/installed has been changed to at least the same level.
This analogy doesn't hold, for me anyway....a connisoure of old Nortons wouldn't buy it to repower it, rather they want it to be, and stay, original. A connisoure of Hatts, I think, is much more interested in her lines, design and integrity. Power on a motor yacht is not a "numbers must match" collectors feature, it's a means of propulsion.
I'm not saying that it can't be done and done very well; but I don't believe that a repower with different engines will improve the resale value of any of these boats. This is something to be done, as others have pointed out, because you want to do it for your own reasons - but resale isn't one of them.
This I'll sort of agree with. The PO of Misty didn't get his money back, though he did a great job repowering her, but his intention was not to get his money back, it was to use the boat, and he set her up wonderfully to do so. But plans change.....
I just recently sold my Porsche 911; when I was talking to some local "experts," they told me to take all the "speed parts" off the car before listing it because the value of the car is lower to a new buyer with them on there. ALSO - and this was quite interesting to me - the car had it's engine REPLACED UNDER WARRANTY BY PORSCHE at 25,000 miles. The car had 56,000 when I sold it so the engine had about 1/2 the mileage of the car. I thought that was a GREAT thing for resale. It wasn't - the car no longer had matching numbers! The new engine REDUCED the value of the car!
Not surprising....a classic car, a potential collectors item, is definately about "numbers matching" originality. I'm not sure that translates into boats, where classic lines and design make more of a difference than original equipment engines, pumps, HVAC, and other systems......
Now if you look at a classic wooden Chris, people might want to see that old engine in there, but on motoryachts? I'm not so sure it's as important.