I was hoping it was up by now, too. I may have to take a dive to visually see if it has a walkthrough transom. If it does not, then I’m out.I was hoping it was going to be on top of the water by now.![]()
I sure hope you don't have to look at it all the time. That would be arduous.
That’s is very helpful information. Thank you!The Legend series were all fractional rigged I think. The mast on what you have is masthead rigged and looks like the older style Cherubini era Hunter masts to me.
Yeah, call me crazy… I think I’m walking away from this project. The hull number says it’s an 85, previous owner says it’s an 87 legend 37. Too many unknowns at this point. Wanted a long project boat and an aft cabin, but maybe this one isn’t it.A boat with balsa cored deck, and potentially hull, submerged for 1.5yrs in fresh water, and you are still considering it? Even if someone else paid for its raising and plopping it in a free workspace, this boat will cost you at least 3x as much as just buying a good one.
Mark
Many of us have tried to tell him this. But there are some non-economic, preference to work on a boat over sailing, based reasons that keep driving this.A boat with balsa cored deck, and potentially hull, submerged for 1.5yrs in fresh water, and you are still considering it? Even if someone else paid for its raising and plopping it in a free workspace, this boat will cost you at least 3x as much as just buying a good one.
Mark
I like the awesome stories of sailing - working on the boat comes with owning a boat to keep it sailing.But what if it is a walk through transom
I get that, we love it on our 240. I would pull it, if given the opportunity. The story would be awesome!
I like the awesome stories of sailing - working on the boat comes with owning a boat to keep it sailing.But what if it is a walk through transom
I get that, we love it on our 240. I would pull it, if given the opportunity. The story would be awesome!
What an awesome story - I pulled a boat off the bottom. Spent years working on it. Spent 10 times the amount of money on getting it in sailing condition and FINALLY got to go sailing for a week before my health crashed and I had to sell it .. Yeah. Not on my list of awesome... But each to their own...
dj
I enjoy working on boats, keeps me out of trouble.Many of us have tried to tell him this. But there are some non-economic, preference to work on a boat over sailing, based reasons that keep driving this.A boat with balsa cored deck, and potentially hull, submerged for 1.5yrs in fresh water, and you are still considering it? Even if someone else paid for its raising and plopping it in a free workspace, this boat will cost you at least 3x as much as just buying a good one.
Mark
Hard for me to understand as I prefer to sail over working on a boat for years and never getting to sail.
There is always lots of ways to spend money on boats but starting with a boat that is going to take years to get into sailing condition, and will cost much more than simply going and buying the exact same boat, or a better boat, in sail-away condition is beyond my ability to understand.
dj
I do have a sailboat that I sail currently, two different stories at the same time is possible.I like the awesome stories of sailing - working on the boat comes with owning a boat to keep it sailing.But what if it is a walk through transom
I get that, we love it on our 240. I would pull it, if given the opportunity. The story would be awesome!
What an awesome story - I pulled a boat off the bottom. Spent years working on it. Spent 10 times the amount of money on getting it in sailing condition and FINALLY got to go sailing for a week before my health crashed and I had to sell it .. Yeah. Not on my list of awesome... But each to their own...
dj
You know that boat ownership provides plenty of opportunities to work on the boat; upgrades & routine maintenance will keep you happy and you will even be able to sail occasionally. I would avoid the sunken boat. It’s been submerged too long.I enjoy working on boats, keeps me out of trouble.
I get that. But I don't think you really understand what fresh water can do to a boat, its systems, and its structural core. Recoring an entire boat is little different than just building a new one from scratch. It may result in a weaker structure, and it will definitely be more hazardous to your health. I have a lot of experience with fiberglass, composites, and structural work, and I would choose to build a new boat rather than restore this one.I enjoy working on boats, keeps me out of trouble.
Thanks, I’m getting closer to that resolution. Currently can’t determine that it’s actually a legend 37. The hull number provided by the state says it is a 1985 Hunter. Soooooo, who knows. May just take a little diving adventure.You know that boat ownership provides plenty of opportunities to work on the boat; upgrades & routine maintenance will keep you happy and you will even be able to sail occasionally. I would avoid the sunken boat. It’s been submerged too long.I enjoy working on boats, keeps me out of trouble.![]()
I think we all know people that spent a lifetime building a boat and never got to sail it. I’ve spent time building several boats but always had one to sail at the same time. Sometimes it’s the satisfaction of just fixing something.I do have a sailboat that I sail currently, two different stories at the same time is possible.