saltshaker
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2005
- Messages
- 6,628
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- 65' CONV -Series I (1986 - 1998)
Here's your explanation, from the perspective of an owner that did the project:
Every year you write checks for maintenance. Every year you depreciate mechanical and finishes, electronics and interior design. A buyer can shop and buy the right boat, in the best of condition, with the right attributes, turn-key, so to speak, but with that purchase comes depreciation and carry costs.
Much of that which you experience as your costs of ownership can be folded into the budget of the project to go along with the drastically reduced cost of the purchase. With, say, 10 years of ownership you won't find that the overall investment on either side of the conversation are dramatically different, and the project boat has the opportunity of being refined to the specific tastes as not will all be as dramatic as my project was in terms of structure and completely new build.
In the end with my 53c, I invested perhaps 25% more than the cost of buying off the shelf and fixing/maintaining/improving/upgrading and the typically higher carry costs of the older product, and I enjoy that delta every time I take her out of sight of land, into rough conditions, as I know what I built was meant to last another 40-50 years. I was okay with the "overpay" as I was happy with the comfort and piece of mind. While I won't ever recover that investment, typically you don't with any boat, any car, any RV, any plane. That's simply the cost of the enjoyment and opportunity.
Very well said. I think many here forget that buying a project and doing a refit isn't about saving money. As you stated you were able to get the boat you wanted and the value comes in the way of usage and enjoyment. My neighbor just took a 1.3 mil hit on a 7 year old 54 Viking. I'd say that cost him much more than your project boat will cost you.