salishpaddler
Veteran Member
Smitty, I appreciate the time you took to formulate your judgment. You asked and I replied to the best of my ability.After reading this I spent a good deal of time reading the listing for the 48 and inspecting the pictures.
- I do not know you
- I do not know the seller of the 48 boat in question
- I do not know the boat in question
- I am not even on the west coast
Here are my observations from someone who has bought and sold a few larger boats with and without a broker.
- The listing was detailed and accurate
- The pictures were very good and plentiful with a 'button' to request more
- You never saw the boat
- The boat is 30 years old
- The boat appears in fantastic condition
My guess's from these observations:
- 95% + of the boats you see that age will be in worse condition
- Most of the listings for boats such as these will be less accurate
- I would never let a broker start or fiddle with my engines and/or machinery
- I never take a potential buyers efforts as serious unless/until they see the boat in question
- Folks that are presented with a genuinely good to great example of a boat model need to then see the boat or move on
- When potential buyers of my boats did not decide to visit the boat themselves but wanted machinery turn-on's rides hauls and the like without a deposit the answer was 'no'.
-Potential buyers of a 'good example' boat the engaged in emails looking for issues even though they had no expertise and did not see the boat were labeled a 'waste or time".
From a buyers perspective I would have determined that this potential transaction was not in my best intertest and ended it as well.
Where you are now:
- apparently looking for a boat that is in great condition
- spending a lot of time speaking poorly about a boat that you had seen
- wishing that owner and broker have a poor future experience and life
I would suggest that you focus on what you really want and how it is you can achieve that. The rest of this is really unnecessary drama and although you maybe very knowledgeable in your field you are not equipped to assess these boats and would be best suited to engage a good surveyor for a quick walk thru or a complete survey when one pops up on your radar.
However, I believe you're being overly harsh.
" . . . speaking poorly about a boat I had seen . . . " What? Are you referring to the time I spent on the Tolly for which I paid dearly without regret after determining it wasn't the boat for me? I spoke factually about a boat I departed with no ill will toward the boat, the seller or the owner.
Since when is it impermissible to grant a licensed broker representing an out-of-town buyer the opportunity to crank the engines, in the slip, in the presence of the selling broker? Since when is it good marketing to refuse to share the details of an engine failure and replacement prior to the receipt of a 10% deposit from an out-of-town buyer whose broker is representing him on site? Since when is it ethical for the selling broker to state he can share previous survey results upon receipt of a 10% deposit and then days later deny the existence of such documentation?
As for your assertion that I do not hold this broker in high regard, you are 100 per cent correct about that. But "wishing that owner and broker have a poor future experience and life" is somewhat over the top and completely out of line. BTW, in reference to your recommendation that I would be best served if I engage a surveyor for a quick walk through, my broker in this transaction is a retired US Navy officer, an engineer with a degree in warship marine mechanical systems. He's a rated 100T skipper. He's eminently qualified to ascertain the quality of a boat. He buys and sells boats in his own right. He's not one who suffers buyer brokers who are demonstrably uncooperative.
There is frankly something amiss about the boat or the broker when a quality boat that would appear at first blush to meet most owners' desires in the PNW, still sits unsold after more than a year, unpromoted, unshown in numerous venues, in a seller's market, and when a legitimate interest is exhibited, the broker insists on seeing cash before turning on the engine. Makes one wonder when was the last time the engines were turned on at all. Or does it just sit in the water like sleeping beauty. I did note earlier one prospective buyer who, upon in-depth inspection of the boat, walked because he felt it didn't live up to its representation.
No doubt, you have the benefit of years of experience as an owner, a buyer and a seller and I respect that. I noted from the outset I'm a newbie with much to learn in a short time. So, with respect, I disagree with your judgment.
At this point, I don't believe there is anything more to be gained by continued discussion of my experience with this boat. I'm moving on in a different direction and will no longer publicly reply to further posts concerning this particular issue. However, I do believe in the value of this thread in its stated purpose in general, that is, to discuss the experiences, positive and negative, of dealing through brokers. Thanks.
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