kermynator
Member
I've mostly been a lurker here since the summer.
I'm searching for a trawler to use a part-time live-aboard and cruiser. I have found many parallels to my previous 18-month long experience of shopping for and buying an airplane. I began my plane searchin the summer of 2011. Ultimately patience paid off and in 2012 I became the owner of a very low-time 1963 Mooney with a freshly overhauled engine. Soon after I added a partner and together we've since sunk at least as much as the purchase price into maintaining the airplane. The result has been exceptional reliability and utility. I flew it from Seattle to the midwest and back this summer without a single glitch. I'm taking what I've learned as an airplane owner and applying it to my search for the right boat. i.e. take the time to find a nicely maintained used machine and the expect to spend at least what you paid for it to make it an even better value.
I spent my first 2 decades in the workforce in aerospace engineering, but recently left that behind for a more enjoyable (and considerably less lucrative) life of a professional pilot. With the added mobility of flying professionally also came the dream of owning a boat I could live on some, if not most, of the time. Having sold the bigger of my two homes, I'm "practicing" living-aboard in my small condo, allowing myself only as much stuff out of my storage unit as I would keep on a boat.
I have been on and around boats nearly as many years as I've been around planes, but unless you count flying seaplanes, I have almost no experience skippering anything bigger than a small runabout. Thus, I'm probably more cautious about buying a boat than an airplane.
Initially I expect to keep the boat in the Seattle area, but once the boat and I have broken each other in, I want to base all of my explorations out of Vancouver.
After 5 months of searching, my absolute minimum requirements are:
-Fiberglass hull
-No teak decks. (I'm in the PNW and plan to be outside year round)
-Large Aft Stateroom with at least a double bed that isn't partly tucked under an overhang.
-Minimum 39-41 LOA and appropriate beam for that size. (I've seen some really nice 34-35 footers, but find that at that size, they trigger the "pacing caged animal reflex" in me.)
-Room for a Washer/Dryer combo (clean clothes/uniforms are a must)
-Clean Well Maintained Diesel/s (my preference would be single with bow thruster)
-Budget of $50k (-ish)
Like many on this forum, I have developed an almost obsessive compulsive addiction to the advanced search features of Yachtworld. I have been stepping aboard and viewing on average one boat a week since June. Nothing yet has caused my heart to race like it did the day I met my airplane.
The most recent boat I looked at (yesterday) was a '76 DeFever 41T. It meets all of my requirements except that it sports twin Lehmans. I realize there are advantages of twins, but from the perspective of an efficiency-minded engineer/pilot, the fact that more complexity results in decreased reliability and increased maintenance is something I really have a difficult time getting past. This is especially significant since, unlike my airplane, I won't be splitting the bills with anyone.
Andrew in Seattle
I'm searching for a trawler to use a part-time live-aboard and cruiser. I have found many parallels to my previous 18-month long experience of shopping for and buying an airplane. I began my plane searchin the summer of 2011. Ultimately patience paid off and in 2012 I became the owner of a very low-time 1963 Mooney with a freshly overhauled engine. Soon after I added a partner and together we've since sunk at least as much as the purchase price into maintaining the airplane. The result has been exceptional reliability and utility. I flew it from Seattle to the midwest and back this summer without a single glitch. I'm taking what I've learned as an airplane owner and applying it to my search for the right boat. i.e. take the time to find a nicely maintained used machine and the expect to spend at least what you paid for it to make it an even better value.
I spent my first 2 decades in the workforce in aerospace engineering, but recently left that behind for a more enjoyable (and considerably less lucrative) life of a professional pilot. With the added mobility of flying professionally also came the dream of owning a boat I could live on some, if not most, of the time. Having sold the bigger of my two homes, I'm "practicing" living-aboard in my small condo, allowing myself only as much stuff out of my storage unit as I would keep on a boat.
I have been on and around boats nearly as many years as I've been around planes, but unless you count flying seaplanes, I have almost no experience skippering anything bigger than a small runabout. Thus, I'm probably more cautious about buying a boat than an airplane.
Initially I expect to keep the boat in the Seattle area, but once the boat and I have broken each other in, I want to base all of my explorations out of Vancouver.
After 5 months of searching, my absolute minimum requirements are:
-Fiberglass hull
-No teak decks. (I'm in the PNW and plan to be outside year round)
-Large Aft Stateroom with at least a double bed that isn't partly tucked under an overhang.
-Minimum 39-41 LOA and appropriate beam for that size. (I've seen some really nice 34-35 footers, but find that at that size, they trigger the "pacing caged animal reflex" in me.)
-Room for a Washer/Dryer combo (clean clothes/uniforms are a must)
-Clean Well Maintained Diesel/s (my preference would be single with bow thruster)
-Budget of $50k (-ish)
Like many on this forum, I have developed an almost obsessive compulsive addiction to the advanced search features of Yachtworld. I have been stepping aboard and viewing on average one boat a week since June. Nothing yet has caused my heart to race like it did the day I met my airplane.
The most recent boat I looked at (yesterday) was a '76 DeFever 41T. It meets all of my requirements except that it sports twin Lehmans. I realize there are advantages of twins, but from the perspective of an efficiency-minded engineer/pilot, the fact that more complexity results in decreased reliability and increased maintenance is something I really have a difficult time getting past. This is especially significant since, unlike my airplane, I won't be splitting the bills with anyone.
Andrew in Seattle