A general question. Does it still make economic sense to bring a generic old fiberglass boat from the 70s or 80s back to life?
I'm talking about a boat that needs major work, that was obtained for little or no cost.
In the past the vibrant market for used boats made this worthwhile in many cases. Now, with the market for older used boats at an all-time low, I'm having a hard time in seeing how any of this makes sense. The only exception I see is specialty boats, limited editions, or boats with other factors that make them candidates for restoration. No Catalina 25s need apply. No disrespect intended to C25s. I owned one and loved it.
I hear of people doing total restores on flooded 24 footers and I wonder how that works out. You find a basketcase, and spend 2000 bucks and 200 hours of your time to turn a free boat into a $2000 boat. And everything that you didn't replace is still old.
I'm not saying don't get an good old boat. Just spend the money up front and buy the BEST one you can find. Any boat that needs major work does not make sense.
EDIT - From my 2nd post below to clarify and consolidate my posts.....
I agree with everyone that talks about emotional investment. I've brought several boats back from the dead. And I totally honor any effort anyone makes to do so.
But I'm looking at it from the start. Never before has the value of 'sweat equity' been so low. You can do tons of work on a low-cost boat, to bring it up to the value of a boat you could have bought for a bit more, often for LESS then the cost it too you to get the basket case there. And you get to enjoy that better boat right away. Thats my question really.
Am I the only one thinking like this? Maybe as I get older my time is worth more. Thoughts?
In short my answer is an unequivocal NO! But, this is based on my definition of "restore"..
Having grown up around concourse quality show cars a "restoration" to me is what 25YearsLater or folks like Tim Lackey of Lackey Sailing do to boats like
Glissando.
I have watched far too many people pour gobs of money into a "fixer upper" and still not be "done" or have done a "restoration" yet are sooo upside down in the boat, from a fair market value proposition, that it makes it a very foolish investment, not that any boat isn't.
The idea that it costs less when restoring "pay check to pay check" is also not sound. You still spend more over time that you would having paid a lump sum for a clean and ready to go boat. It may feel like you paid less but only in rare occasions would you.
If a boat is rare a "resto" can be a great option but to bring a "generic old fiberglass boat from the 70s or 80s back to life" when you can buy one already brought back to life for a fraction more than what you'd need to spend is not a wise choice. All boats need work even boats in the top 2% so you will ALWAYS have time to putter and work on a boat.
Here's a prime example. A neighbor enlisted my advice when looking at two Catalina 30's. One was in top notch condition, a genuine pristine boat needing nothing but your own fresh linens. The other boat needed nearly everything and was very poorly maintained and cared for but less $$$$$. My neighbor got hung up on the $$$$ aspect and not in the REALITY aspect despite hours of discussions. He fit the true definition of naive or inexperienced buyer, he knows that now..... .Some things you simply can not teach.
Both boats were the same year, same model and only 8k apart in asking price with the most expensive, at that time, being about 32k. Fast forward three years....
A gear box
A re-power
New standing riging
New Furler
New running rigging
New canvas
New sails
Numerous deck core repairs
Wiring upgrades
Batteries
Interior cushions
Wet bulkhead repair
Keel repairs
Bottom job
etc. etc. etc.
By the time the boat was "close to" as good as the one for 32k, which he likely could have purchased for 29k, he was sooo upside down it was not even laughable.. For the "junker" he paid 24k which was only approx a 5k up front difference. Three years later he had over 60k (35k in fixing up NOT even a restoration) into a 24k purchase price Catalina 30.:cussing:
Sadly the boat was still worth 28-29k just what the one he didn't buy could have been purchased for.... For 5k more the other boat was already there. This little escapade in penny pinching the initial purchase price cost him $25,000.00 more........ Moral of the story, don't be penny wise pound foolish....

A little more up front, on a pristine example of the boat you want, often goes a LOOOOOOONG way....