I've been following this thread a bit and it seems that establishing market value for a damaged boat is nearly impossible unless you know the fair market value for a vessel in Bristol condition.... it appears that the seller has considered the cost of repairs and upgrades and subtracted them from the Bristol price..... to come up with his selling number.... does that make sense.
you must do the same thing.
When purchasing a "bargain" you must know it's finished value first.... You must decide what the market value would be if it were fixed up.... then figure your costs to put it that way...
Then you start crunching the numbers to come up with a fair purchase price that will absorb your fix up costs and adequate profit margin.... Then you make your offer based on this knowledge, including a small margin for negotiation.
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in my opinion... this has been a great experience for you and will help you in your next effort.
If you truly love a boat for its design, reputation, style, etc.... then you will do what ever you can to acquire it....
So.... if a vessel appeals to you in an emotional, spiritual way.... I don't think you can pay too much for it.... because you can't put a price on love.
Joe,
what yo usaid makes perfect sense to me, and its the way I have been figuring it all along, but not knowing how many other factors I should be figuring in.....
considering a new 33-35ft offshore/bluewater boat outfitted like this one is, would probabley be in the 250-270,000 range (that may be a bit high), and a 10yr old one in bristol condition will probably command a price of around 100G....
I can reasonably see this boat, in bristol condition in the 30-35G range.......
so if in fact it is that high, the upgrades to put it there exceed the value....
BUT.... I dont really need a boat in bristol condition... somewhat a little below that is fine with me.... all I want is safe, seaworthy and somewhat pleasent to look at.
figuring the cost of the necessary items just to get it to an acceptable basic condition that will look good to a surveyor, will cost about 18G, (this is a complete and proper blister repair, new sails, rubrail, LPsystem repair, electrical repair, dodger/bimini, plus other minor issues, ECT...) if the work was to be hired out to a boat yard....
doing the work myself, and forgoing the need for "new" sails, but finding some good used ones, and leaving the bottom alone, other than the repair of any larger blisters that pop up from time to time, and doing most of the work my self, I can see cutting the actual cost to nearly 25% of the estimated cost.
but I dont think I should be "giving away"
my time in the estimated costs of repairs... (if im willing and capable of doing most of the work myself to bring down the cost of repairs, that should go to my credit, not the sellers)... nor should I consider used or wore out sails to be acceptable, when figuring a bristol condition price.
so using all this for the purpose of finding a reasonable value of the boat, as it sits at this dock, in this condition, in my mind its somewhat closer to a 10 to 12,000 dollar boat....:cry: