BoatDog wrote:So, something like this is an anomaly, and won't come around again?
You see that little*sentence "Does need some TLC"?* That is almost always-- particularly with a wood boat--- an indication that the boat needs a LOT of work.* Don't trust photos--- just about any boat that's still on top of the water can look good in photos.* Photos show you the paint, that's about all.* They don't show the massive dry rot in the subdeck, failing plank fasteners, etc.
As to the "ready to cruise" statement, that's attached to every ad for a boat that is able to move under its own power.* It tells you nothing about the condition of the engines, tranmissions, shafts, cutless bearings, props, etc.
Unless the owner of this particular boat is so desperate for money that they are giving the boat away, I would be totally leery of a GB36--- even an old woody like this one--- at that price.* Unless the owner is so in need of sellng the boat to be willing to take a big loss it, this boat will have some major problems to deal with that will probably cost the price of the boat to fix.
Never say never, but that has been my experience and observation with regards to GBs over the last 12 years.* Were I in the market for a GB36 woody, I doubt I would even consider this one given the price unless I could learn the conditions under which the seller was trying to sell it.* Every now and then a deal like this can come up (on any make of boat) where the boat is actually halfway decent but the seller is desparate to rid him/herself of the boat.
However the only way to find out for sure is to haul the boat and have it VERY thoroughly surveyed by a surveyor who REALLY understands wood boats.* These guys are few and far between.* The surveyor who can do a fine job on a glass boat is more often than not totally at sea on a wood boat.* While I can't believe there is only one, I know of only one surveyor in the Puget Sound region I would trust to do a complete and correct survey on a wood GB.* I don't know the situation anywhere else.
I watched a friend (he was the broker who found us our boat) take a wood GB32 which he'd purchased as "ready to cruise," "needs some work" and put almost $100 grand into it, from a new John Deere engine to*installing a number*of new planks below the water line to*a total rebuild of the flying bridge to a complete-- and I mean total--- refinish of the entire interior of the boat.* The boat was like a Whack-a-Mole game: every time he*started to fix a problem, another one, often much more severe, was uncovered.*
He ended up with an immaculate GB32, but there was no way he could ever come close to recouping what he put into it.* And this was when the economy was good and boat-buying activity was hot.* He was very knowledgeable about GBs but he told me later that had he known what this "nice-looking, ready to cruise" boat would require him to do and the end cost of doing it, he never would have bought it.
The boat itself aside, the costs to get a boat across the country are not insignificant.* Way back in 1998 it cost us $4,000 to have our GB36 trucked from Alameda up to Tacoma.* Twelve years later I've heard that trucking costs for that same basic distance are at least half again as high.* I've never had any reason to price trucking costs from*the east or southeast coasts*to the PNW but people on the GB forum have and I seem to recall it's well into five figures.
The company we used had a special low-boy trailer that dropped the forefoot of the boat almost to the pavement.* This meant that the flying bridge did not have to come off.* The trucking company told us that a GB36 was the largest GB they*could do this way--- anything larger had to have the flying bridge removed.
But the bridge clearances in the eastern part of the country are often lower than out west because the highways and bridges are older back there.* If the flying bridge of a GB woody has to come off for transporation and then be put back on, you're looking at a major (aka expensive) job. On a glass GB it's not a small job but it's basically "just" unscrewing a whole lot of relatively easy-to-get-to screws.
-- Edited by Marin on Thursday 14th of October 2010 12:27:53 PM