"Roll Call" For Gourmet Cruisers and Island Gypsies

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From Clipper to Halvorsen

My beloved Clipper 30 Ft aka shipshape has found a new loving owner who is enjoying her very much ..... :dance:
After 4 months of looking, we found this beauty ... a Halvorsen 42 Pilothouse, I post some photos
 

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... I have a question that has been slowly developing since I met another IG owner at my marina.

He has a twin Lehman setup and I have a single John Deere....his boat sits much lower in the water. Mine probably sits 8 inches higher than his.

Mine is also very tender and rolly in swells. Wondering if there is anyone who may have some ideas about proper ballast? Do you think with a single engine, I am that much lighter and I need to add a thousand pounds of ballast? ( I think each Lehmans weighs about 1200lb)
I`ve only seen one single engined 36 here in Australia,based on TF postings I`d guess that most singles went to USA. There would have to be both an engine and a fuel tankage weight difference, but I`d expect IG to work that into the build so boats with singles sat in the water at the right level.IG were quite good builders and Harvey H knew about designing boats.

Have you been on the boat with twins? Does it behave differently in similar conditions. If it is noticeably more stable you might be on the right track,but be cautious adding(and securing) large amounts of ballast without getting expert advice.
 
We are considering a 2001 Halvorsen 32 with a Cummins 6BT5.9M2 motor. Might your boat have the same and if so, do you have any fuel consumption data?
 
We run our GC32 between 1800 and 2000 rpms. Fuel burn is around 2.25-2.75 gph depending on wind and waves.
 
We cruise anywhere between 7.5 and 8.5 knots.
And yes, we have single Cummins 6BTA 5.9, 330 hp.

We’re current cruising in the Gulf Islands of BC.
 
poorly build Halvorsen

We are considering a 2001 Halvorsen 32 with a Cummins 6BT5.9M2 motor. Might your boat have the same and if so, do you have any fuel consumption data?

I wouldn't buy any Halvorsen ... very poorly build (mine was build in Hong Kong) , basically nothing was sealed properly, heaps of water ingress leading to major rot. Stay away from Halvorsen
 
I wouldn't buy any Halvorsen ... very poorly build (mine was build in Hong Kong) , basically nothing was sealed properly, heaps of water ingress leading to major rot. Stay away from Halvorsen
Erik,very sorry to read of your experience with a very nice looking boat.
I thought by the time your boat was built, production was by Jiang Hua in Guangzhou. Not Hong Kong where IGs were finished by Kong & Halvorsen after construction in China. Jiang Hua currently build Integrity boats.
But,in the 2000s some Halvorsens were built locally in NSW Australia, mainly 38s,so Halvorsen could have been building in HK, just as you say.
An ex TF member I got to know had a ? 2006 Halvorsen 32 with single Cummins and was quite happy with it. He bought from a Marina neighbour of ours,he seemed happy with it too. Certainly no mention of water ingress and rot.
 
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sorry correction, built in Fu Shan, China
 
Hello, all. I'm under contract on a 2003 32 Gourmet Cruiser. Currently in Maryland and owned by a (thankfully) meticulous airline pilot. Sea trial and survey were on Friday, no significant issues, and hoping to close next week. Will add pics/details if/when the boat is "mine"!
 
Been away for the winter... a couple from last fall moved her from Green Bay, WI to Waverly, TN. Toscana enjoyed her first winter in the water :)
 

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I closed our our purchase of "Gatsby", GC hull #7 ("007" on the placard) two weeks ago today, and brought her down from Harve de Grace, Maryland, to her new home of Deale, Maryland, a week ago Sunday. 6 hour cruise on the Chesapeake and literally saw only one other vessel the entire way - a CG safe boat at the entrance to the Baltimore harbor approach.

Cruised for another 4 hours last weekend, the boat is a great fit for my wife and me. And, based on what Codger2 shared with me, Harvey Halvorsen would've loved the fact that the first thing my new marina neighbor said to me when I met him last weekend was: "My friend has been looking at Hinckleys, but when I saw your boat I sent him some pictures and said he should take a look at the Halvorsen." I had to break the news that there aren't too many Gourmet Cruisers on offer...
 
One more thing...I purchased an original copy of the September 2003 edition of "Motor Boats Monthly" (out of print now) from a seller on ebay in the UK. The cover is the 32 GC. Happy to scan/email to anyone interested, just PM me.
 
Cruised for another 4 hours last weekend, the boat is a great fit for my wife and me. .
My wife and I really enjoyed our GC 32 for 8 years. The only reason we sold it was that we needed another stateroom for our "younger" guests. I am fast approaching 80 and refuse to give up my boating passion but having younger crew along for the ride really reduces the stress in my wife. (And me!)
 

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We closed our deal on our 1989 Island Gypsy 32, hull 102, last October. After a 20 hour sea trial (another story) she reached her home port, Hamilton ON, just in time to put it on the hard for winter. Received her registration papers in time for Christmas.
Changed out the cutlass bearing (introduced to a fiberglass shaft log) realigned the engine, new upholstery, through cleaning, and some other minor maintenance items, we launch in 7 weeks. I must say, with outside winter storage, having a diesel heater makes winter projects more comfortable than our previous boat.
Looking forward to this season.
 
Canada must be more efficient... I closed 7/31/19 and just got my Document this week!
 
Photos and update

Hi everyone. We finally splashed our new to us IG 30 this past August and now it's almost time to put her to bed for the winter.

She is a 1985 - 30 footer; Hull No 82

Still a few things to do... finish with the name placards on the side (once we agree on the name) and getting some additional canvas for sun shade for next year.

We did put 2-110 Watt solar panels on the Bimini (With the magnets) and worked wonderfully.

Trying to put a few photos up... hopefully this works.
 

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Hi all. I am seriously considering a GC 32. I have read through all of the posts (I think) but haven’t seen much on the sea kindliness of the GC 32. I plan on cruising the North East / New England coast. Weather and seas can kick up. How does the GC 32 perform in the ocean?
 
Been away for the winter... a couple from last fall moved her from Green Bay, WI to Waverly, TN. Toscana enjoyed her first winter in the water :)

Nice boat! We used to own river front property just outside of Clifton, TN. Great area.

Chris
 
Tim - the post of our purchase of Moon Dragon IG 32 (same hull as a CG32) in October 2019 is a few responses above this one. The delivery home was on Lake Ontario running in 15 + knots wind and 3-4 foot seas at 10 second intervals. Weather was not supposed to build until 12 hours later. We ran for 7 hours, steady at 6 knots, yes spray came over the bow - but at no time buried the nose. It was not the smoothest ride ever, but not uncomfortable. Autopilot handled the boat well. (Shepards pie did get tossed from the oven to the oven door. We laughed, and put it back in where it stayed.) We did head into port as home was still 13 hours away.
Took a lay day and left again 28 hours later for a 13 hour run home. Winds less than 6 knots & seas 1-2 feet.
Took 3 weeks last summer (2020). Post card perfect. One day had 3 foot swells left over from the day before - boat rode very nicely. On day stayed in harbour as winds there were reading 16 knots with gust to 25 knots.
Same run home as the year before - 13 hours at 7 knots - maybe 2 foot seas.
Great Lake waters are different than the ocean - particularly the wave or swell intervals.
I have been off Marblehead in 20 foot swells in a 24-foot Mako - much different than the lake. That said, my PO had ours as far south as SC and chartplotter and has positions up the St Lawrence to Rimouski.
 
I have my 36 for sale in Grand Haven, MI
 
Timr, we just sold our GC32 (hull #007) last month after a single year of ownership, so my experience is limited. But we put 150 hours on it last year, all on the Chesapeake Bay, from Harve de Grace to the Potomac, and up the Potomac to DC and back. We loved the boat. We sold it only because, once covid hit, we decided we needed a larger boat for longer passages / time aboard and just purchased a Grand Banks Eastbay 47 FB.

Here's my observation of my time underway. The boat is very sea kindly in head and quartering seas. Yes, it's wet anytime the seas are 2'+ (east coast tightly spaced, not west coast rollers w/ 15 seconds in between). But that didn't bother me at all, as I'm in dry in the pilot house.

When in a 2'+ following sea, it tracks fairly well, but could use a larger rudder. It does require attention. My autopilot (original Raymarine, so circa 2003) would make erratic and unduly large corrections when in a larger sea, so turning off the autopilot was more comfortable (albeit more work).

You'll want to avoid any sizeable beam sea. We had 4'+ on the beam returning to our home port in Deale, MD from Annapolis last Mother's Day. I had fun, because I like seeing how a boat performs, but my wife and one of the two dogs were not happy in the least. I ended up taking the long way home ("tacking" to avoid the beam sea). But I don't think this has anything to do with the hull - it's a function of any hull this shape without stabilization.

We had the Cummins 5.9BTA @ 330hp. Mainly cruised at 1800 rpm and 8ish knots. With a clean bottom, she would run 12ish kts at 2600 rpm and 14 or so at WOT.

Great boat, best layout below (separate head and shower) I've seen in a boat this size. And definitely gets attention. Everywhere we went, people commented on how beautiful the boat was. Best of luck!
 
Thanks for the reply. I only recently joined this forum and didn’t realize one has to go back to check for replies. No notification if there is a reply to a post. I have my survey and sea trial this Friday May 21 in Irvington VA.
 
GC 32 heght

All, the survey and sea trail went well. The only issue that came up is with the swim platform which has been noted in this forum on other threads by GC 32 owners. I posted a new thread about the overall height of the GC 32 (no fly bridge) but did not get any replies. The documentation shows overall height at 13' but that sketch also shows a foot under the prop, from the keel to rudder. The 2004 I am closing on this week does not have a foot and the rudder certainly would not accommodate one. There is a significant price difference in fees and permits once over 12'6''. Can anyone confirm overall height?
 

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IG32 in sydney

Hi
Ours is sill right side up but needing some love at the moment, dealing with some generatot issues then need to get into the paintwork!
Not sure how to get the image uploaded but IG32-55.
Originally sent to florida and imported to Australia as MrSEAII just before the GFC, we have owned it since then and renamed "Monesk" - an amalgamtion of our names.
 
Gc32 height

I closed on the GC32 "Cork" last week and renamed her "Ocean Rose". It is still in VA. I had it hauled today and will have it prepped for shipping. No fly bridge, so remove radar mast and antenna. The marina is going to get me an accurate overall height measurement. Let's hope it is 12'6''' and not 13'. It could be the most expensive 6'' known.
 
Howdy all,
I purchased my IG32 "Markeeta" in February this year and have set about to bring her back to her former glory. Thanks to a couple of TF'rs, I think I made a half decent decision and so far I am pretty happy. She was a tad tired cosmetically, but the running gear was sound. The PO and I serviced the main Lehman 120 engine and changed over the HX, oil lines, header tank and exhaust elbow. I am currently in a varnish-induced state of euphoria stripping back the main cabin interior to bare wood and re-staining her. I spent a couple of days carefully sanding the trims, but ended up opting for a heatgun and a scraper. What fun!

Below are some snaps:

Sitting in her berth located in Victoria, Australia. New horns and VHF antennas have since been added. Above the blue line on the coach house has been freshly and professionally painted.
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Flybridge pre new fit-out.
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The state of the cockpit timber frame.
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Cockpit frame after some love.
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Fresh paint job inside gunwales and over brow.
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New upper helm instrument cluster.
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New SS custom Bimini frame.
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Cabin strip.
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Lower helm during strip.
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Galley after staining and before varnish.
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Still to come in coming weeks:
Varnish cabin
Paint cabin
New curtains coming at the end of this week
Bimini, cockpit cover and windscreen covers
Kiwigrip FB sole and foredeck
:thumb:
 
:socool:Nice job. I did the same thing after my purchase but at 76 I just don't have the stamina any longer. Spend most of my time working on the house and raveling in the motorhome. Spend the summer on Lk Michigan in the boat. "Out Of The Blue"
 
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