Yeah, my C25, although a tall rigger, was slow when I first bought her used off Craigslist; she needed a hull job desperately and had all basic rigging. As time went by, I earned money racing in Galveston for different crews and organizations and eventually mustered up enough cash to buy older, used racing parts and fit them to Valiant. A cockpit traveler system, lighter Harken blocks and tackle, lighter self-tailing winches, new hull paint and wax, interior gutting, braces under the shroud plates, a 30% lighter mast, Spectra halyards, all new sheets, a kevlar mainsail and more adjustable rigging (cunningham, boom vang, outhaul, topping lift, etc.). I even removed the furling pole and had my jib fitted with hanks to give me a better sail plan and shape; I didn't want to replace that headsail because it came brand new with the boat as a 130% genoa.
Would a new boat have been nice? Well, of course, but I didn't buy a new one once I started working on Valiant because she was, and still is, mine. I put my heart and soul and hard work and time into getting her the way I like her, and I wouldn't trade her for the world. She may look like a normal 1984 C25, but she can and has outrun top-of-the-line yachts (Beneteaus, Js, etc.) in the right weather and with the right crew onboard. You are right, Jackdaw, in saying that newer designs and faster boats sell, but selling a boat to a customer and having the customer sell their heart to the boat are two completely different things. I've sailed a few top-line boats (America's Cup Yachts America, Shamrock and USA 76 included), and I was monumentally impressed, of course, but I was also very uncomfortable and somewhat afraid something might break (which things typically did on Beneteaus more than others). You seem to be a very experienced and well seasoned racer, sir, and I respect that very much because I'm only 18 years old and love to both teach and learn the ways of strategic sailing; I hope to get better acquainted with you, as well as everyone else on this website! Being stuck in Cypress sucks
hardly anyone sails except the Sea Scouts!
Would a new boat have been nice? Well, of course, but I didn't buy a new one once I started working on Valiant because she was, and still is, mine. I put my heart and soul and hard work and time into getting her the way I like her, and I wouldn't trade her for the world. She may look like a normal 1984 C25, but she can and has outrun top-of-the-line yachts (Beneteaus, Js, etc.) in the right weather and with the right crew onboard. You are right, Jackdaw, in saying that newer designs and faster boats sell, but selling a boat to a customer and having the customer sell their heart to the boat are two completely different things. I've sailed a few top-line boats (America's Cup Yachts America, Shamrock and USA 76 included), and I was monumentally impressed, of course, but I was also very uncomfortable and somewhat afraid something might break (which things typically did on Beneteaus more than others). You seem to be a very experienced and well seasoned racer, sir, and I respect that very much because I'm only 18 years old and love to both teach and learn the ways of strategic sailing; I hope to get better acquainted with you, as well as everyone else on this website! Being stuck in Cypress sucks