jim rosenthal
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2005
- Messages
- 11,050
- Hatteras Model
- 36' CONVERTIBLE-Series I (1969 -1977)
"Some boats are not a bargain even if someone gave it to you..."
Boy, is that ever true. Many years ago I looked at a boat in Florida- a 44' Striker that had been left behind someone's house, plugged into shore power, sitting in salt water, with no maintenance, no changes of zincs, etc etc. It was proven to me with the aid of a calculator that even as a gift- delivered free- this boat was an instant ticket to financial ruin. Even starting from NO investment, the amount of money that was required to bring this boat back to running safe cosmetically acceptable condition was way more than she would be worth. Only if you owned a boatyard that was experienced with metal boats could you even hope to possible break even. And if you had to hire the work done, you would be instantly upside down the day you took ownership of the boat (and the boat took ownership of you).
I've thought about that many times. It is very easy to get totally inverted financially with no hope of righting oneself in old boats. We are relatively lucky here- Hatteras yachts are worth something if kept up. Or, put another way, it is slightly more difficult to go broke doing a stem-to-stern top-to-bottom restoration in a Hatteras compared to other makes of boats. You might even come out even, or slightly ahead. It's been done.
Boy, is that ever true. Many years ago I looked at a boat in Florida- a 44' Striker that had been left behind someone's house, plugged into shore power, sitting in salt water, with no maintenance, no changes of zincs, etc etc. It was proven to me with the aid of a calculator that even as a gift- delivered free- this boat was an instant ticket to financial ruin. Even starting from NO investment, the amount of money that was required to bring this boat back to running safe cosmetically acceptable condition was way more than she would be worth. Only if you owned a boatyard that was experienced with metal boats could you even hope to possible break even. And if you had to hire the work done, you would be instantly upside down the day you took ownership of the boat (and the boat took ownership of you).
I've thought about that many times. It is very easy to get totally inverted financially with no hope of righting oneself in old boats. We are relatively lucky here- Hatteras yachts are worth something if kept up. Or, put another way, it is slightly more difficult to go broke doing a stem-to-stern top-to-bottom restoration in a Hatteras compared to other makes of boats. You might even come out even, or slightly ahead. It's been done.