My experience
To answer the Hunter bashers point by point.1. The designers at Hunter are realists. Under 30' Hunters are not designed for offshore use; they are designed for how their owners are likely to use them. In general, larger Hunters are designed for more rigorous sailing. People who feel a need to take a <30' boat far off shore (all dozen or so) will just have to look elsewhere. Hunter designs boats for their market, that is why they are still around. I have never seen an over 40' Hunter that could not be taken off shore with proper preparation. My H-34 has seen the worst the Chesapeake has to offer, and never given me a second thought. Properly prepared, I would not be concerned with her off shore. She can surely take far more than the wife and I. 2. Quality control, in my experience (two early eighties Hunters, both bought new, still own the last, an '83 H-34), was questionable with our first, a Cherubini H-27. The second, the boat we still own, was just the opposite. Ours is Hull #75 and we had the rudder replaced for the "performance" rudder (free from Hunter, I paid the labor to replace). We had a hole drilled in error through the deck and not patched at the factory, and we had the bow reinforced with additional fiberglass matt to prevent ash canning in headseas - paid for by the factory. No other warranty issues. Some of these are the result of carelessness, and some the result of having an early hull number of a boat that was wildly popular and could not be produced fast enough. Through the years we have had hull blisters, the typical iron keel maintenance, and gelcoat that is not quite as well finished as some other boats - including Hunters. Replaced five perfectly good gate valves (interesting what higher priced boats of the era also used gate valves) after about ten years of use, and replaced the original head and holding tank. Added new sails, single line reefing, and replaced rope clutches for better designed units. None of these issues are unusual, even in higher priced boats. I look at newer Hunters and think the quality has increased markedly since we purchased ours. 3. RVs with sails? Well, our interior is more closely related to Coleman than Sabre, Hinckley, or Morris. I saw that when I bought the boat, and chose to forgo the Chippendale interior. Our boat gets used hard, it would be a shame to pay for a hand crafted expensive wood interior that gets beaten up. I have replaced through the years what hasn't held up. Slow and tender on the water? Tender if you are used to short rigged crab crushers, but not slow by any standard. One of the reasons we still own our 34 is its performance, especially in Chesapeake light airs. It is really fun to sail circles around Valiant 40s in 5 to 7 knots of wind. 4. Maybe the cheapest boat you can buy, but certainly not loaded with cheap equipment. Mostly the same as the Sabre 34 (even the engine) I shopped when looking to buy our 34. Much of the equipment standard on the Hunter was optional on the Sabre (opening ports, anchor, sails, self tailing winches, 110v power).5. Not particularly maintenance intensive in my experience. Seems people I know with big name boats spend more than I do. My H-34 has cost about $1,000 a year in depreciation. Looking at Yachtworld, I currently see 1984 Sabre 34s selling for $55k to $57k. That boat cost about 50% more than my Hunter when new - say $80k. Sounds like about $1,000 a year depreciation there too. You have to be careful to compare apples to apples when comparing a high-buck boat to a Hunter. High buck boats are mostly owned by wealthy people who lavish exceptional professional maintenance on their pride and joy at the Hinckley yard in Maine, or similar establishment in Annapolis. Hunters are often owned by mere mortals, like me, who do their own maintenance. I think one is much more likely to find a run down Hunter than a Hinckley, hence higher depreciation. Believe me, boats selling for more than their price new (with some exceptions) have had continual upgrades in equipment, and look better than new. Hunter bashers are a strange lot. I guess they have a hard time being just as cold, hot, wet, seasick, and exhausted, with the same view from the helm, for twice the cost of a Hunter. People have to somehow justify paying more. For what I do, the Hunter has been a sensational value.