Yikes! The Costs!!
Seems my alter-ego co-authority Steve Dion is on mark with the cost of re-keeling your boat, but the other guys have a point, too. The keel ain't just weight; it's a design component that goes along with everything else put in or on the boat. Typically, keels are matched for rig size as well as seakeeping capabilities. Tinker with the keel and your court disaster. But, there is a way, if you want to spend the money.First, learn the term, "hire a naval architect." Keel design is tricky biz. A winged keel, as the Aussies showed us in 1983, can do a number of good things for your boat.But, your boat BUCs out at about $16,000 regardless of what you are planning to do. Market value may be a little more than that; I just did an engine repower in my 78h30, which, by the way, has 4.5' of draft and perfect for my conditions here on Galveston Bay which is notoriously shallow particularly after a Norther blows through in winter. Anyway, I've got $22k tied up in my boat and I can get that out of it here on the local market. Just because you throw $50,000 at your boat doesn't mean it's worth $50k!Using Steve's math at Mars Metal, just casting your new keel is going to cost $9,225 minus scrap value of your existing keel and exclusive of any design and installation costs, which I would imagine will easily push your project over the $12,000 mark. Now your $16k boat is costing you $28,000. At that price, you're pretty upside down on the market value of your boat.In my mind, the older Hunter 30s are damn good boats for the buck, but you have to control your budget. Beyond a certain point, any money you put into the boat will have to be recouped in the form of "pleasure equity," i.e., you get pleasure from using the boat as modified with no expectation of ever seeing those dollars come out of it at the time of sale. In my mind, the costs of trying to retrofit a different keel to such an elderly boat is probably not the best financial decision one can make and you'd probably be much better off taking the advice of the others in this column who suggest looking for a boat, including the shoal-draft Hunters, already fit with a shoal-draft keel than trying to modify the one you are looking at.Good luck.