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Congratulations!!
When you say "I will do it all over again." That can be taken two ways...
:lol::lol::lol:
At least in a wooden boat you "do it all over again". This is harder on a fibreglass one.
Congratulations!!
When you say "I will do it all over again." That can be taken two ways...
A few points of order folks.
1. Wood floats of itself, GRP does not.
2. Boats have been being made of wood way longer than from synthetics. All the parts regularly immersed in salt water do not rot.
3. Another beauty of wood is it can just have a dodgy bit cut out, and new part cut to size and glued and fixed in, and they are good to go. Ask me how I know. Ok...the cabin of my '75 CHB 34 was timber, and did get a few areas of rot.
With respect, good plan. The 110v set up could suggest the boat was imported used, perhaps when the $ was higher and cost effective buying for from USA. Talk to a marine electrician(if one doesn`t chime in here) on handling the voltage/appliance issues.Haha. I think I’m hooked - but I can talk myself down easily enough. When I say love, I mean updating - old electronics / appliances etc. She’s looked after, but original. She has a four year old genset, but the onboard systems are 110v which is annoying because NZ is 240v. Means if the fridge or washing machine shits itself I have a problem….anyone done a conversion - I’m assuming the cabling will be up to it because of the extra current 110v needs to carry. I’m going to handle the analysis in two stages. The boat is 800k from where I live so I’m going to pay a boat builder to go and take a look to give me a “**** - run!” or “for the right price this has potential” kind of opinion. If it’s the latter I’ll get on a plane with the wife and kids and go and take a look. If we like we’ll then do the full survey and see what we can find. There’s no hurry - these boats are appeal to a limited market!
I have never heard of this - the closest is an OLD story about a guy who did a 42 from Hawaii to Seattle. I really, really doubt this 50 made it any significant open ocean crossing. Does it have stabilizers?Yes she was sailed in from FLA via the pacific islands about 10 years ago. Has an inverter for shore power here - 240 to 110. Would be good to have it all 240 “native” so I can replace the appliances…
Well - that's definitely more laissez-faire than USA & EU (not that sure about the rest of the world).I've checked. NZ is a very easy place to own a boat. Marinas are fine - you only need electrical certification if you're plugging into shore power, insurance is easy - just need a survey and lift / haul no issues. Did you know that private vessels don't need to be licensed here - and nor do the skippers. Regulation free - at least in recreational marine!
It`s good you checked and a survey will get you lifted. With haulout [which Australia at least calls "slipping"], either with slings and Travelift, or "cradle on railway" method, slip operators can hesitate slipping/hauling wooden boats, especially if they had one "die" in the process due to stress on the hull. They don`t like cleaning up the mess.
If you have salt water over the main deck of a FD GB you're a braver man than I. These are coastal cruisers. If you have it over the boat deck...Wood boats tend to rot from the decks down. Salt water is your friend, fresh water isn't. The negative comments on wooden boats tend to come from people who don't use their boats enough or at least not "at sea". If you have salt water over the decks, and plenty of it, they last just fine.
Thanks for that. At 3500 hours she’s probably been repowered. My wooden boat builder said the same thing re salt water! Does anyone have any idea how thick the teak would be? And what’s under it?
If you have salt water over the main deck of a FD GB you're a braver man than I. These are coastal cruisers. If you have it over the boat deck...
But the teak on deck isn't the problem - it's the water that leaks through. In a GB it's a particular issue - google "grand banks fuel tank replacement" and you'll see 4.8m results - this is sadly well trodden ground. The partially covered side decks in the OP's image might mitigate rain and sun damage a bit - you'd have to look carefully at the drainage and the scuppers look rather small to my eye.