looking at 1975 22 cat.

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Paul

There seems to be a lot informed catalina 22 owners on this site, please help me if you can. I'm looking at buying a1975 cat. 22 that has not been out of the water for five years. Ther is no deck damage and the wood is starting to rot inside. At $500 is there that much that could be wrong, or can i pretty much rebuid anything for the price of anewer boat. Thanks for any response.
 
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LaDonna Bubak - Catalina Owners

$500?!?!?!

Buy it! BUY IT! Sheesh, for 500 bucks you can part it out. Seriously, that's a deal you can pass up. Put a little elbow grease into it (not to mention a couple of bucks) and you'll have yourself a nice little boat. LaDonna
 
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mg

careful

i get grief here all the time on this one. but here goes. the question is what do you want to do. sail or rebuild a boat, or are you in business of salvage. (with the exceptoin of no money in which case beer and chips will get you on a lot of boats) i buy newer boats because as you fix up the old ones it is surprising how much it actually costs to get it in shape(and most folks want the old boat to look pretty new and new costs money plain and simple). sure you can reduce the cost with doing the work yourself .but then that is time you are working and not sailing. most people seem to enjoy working on their boats but a major refit is a lot of work. by the time you factor in all the elements i feel the best "value " is in the 5 to 8 year old boat. depending on the time line you intend to own her. hardly any work (for another 4 years) and most of the depreciation is out of her.all in all you probably cant sail a 22 for less than 2-3k year on a 4 year ownership. (including slip,ins, parts,upgrades, trailer,tow vehicle(the diff of the truck vs the smaller car you'd probably own it were not for the boat, plus the lost gas milage....yeah i sit around and think too much..) storage ect. others will do it cheaper but i dont think its the usual) and i dont think they have actually done the cost analysis. that takes time from sailing too. so armed with this the first thing to decide is ask what do you want to do. i did this last year after 6 boats and picked up a laser. nothing to do to it but sail. later i decided that boat ownership appealed to me and picked up a mid year 22. now i sail less but hang at the marina more. if i had gone with the older boat id be at the marina doing work . start with what you really want to do . by the way im convinced we all need 4 boats. one to cruise , one to sail fast, one to fish , and one for just beat up and not care about . good luck oh one other thing , pride of ownership needs to be figured in too . but thats another day. and may be the fourth boat on the list.
 
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Larry

Older C-22

Paul; I had a '76 C-22 for awhile. Look for cracking of the fiberglass around the mast compression post inside the cabin. If the rig, hull, swinging keel and rudder are sound, you can sail it now and work on it when the weather isn't right for sailing.
 
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Matt

I agree with MG 110%...

I learned the hard way. I bought an 82 fin keel for $900. It was damaged in a hurricane and needed a little fiberglass work. To make a long story short, I have spent several thousand and countless hours working on the boat. All of the wiring had to be replaced. Both the standing and running rigging had to be replaced. I had to strip the keel to bare metal and start over. The sails that came with the boat were for a C-25. Blocks and wenches are about to have to be replaced. The whole boat had to be repainted. The forward hatch was missing and I have been waiting over two months for CD to ship it. The list goes on and on. All in all, I have spent close to $6000 and I still need sails. You can get a decent boat that is ready to sail for $6k..
 
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