We found the boat we recently purchased on YW. We had been actively searching for about 2 years. The boat we bought is a Beebe Passagemaker. It's a one off build from plans by Robert Beebe. It was NOT listed as a trawler, or a long range cruiser, or anything else that I was using for search parameters. I only found it because someone had posted another boat advertised on YW on the "interesting boats" thread, and it got me thinking. THAT boat didn't show up in my searches either, so I must be using too restrictive search parameters, sez I!
I started from scratch, did a search for:
Used boats
Power boats
Age: 1975 - 2000
Price: max $400k usd
Region: North America
Fuel type: Diesel
Length: 40' to 60'
Hull material: Aluminum, Steel, or FRG (not wood) nothing against wood, but didn't want the maintenance issues, especially in warm waters
Exclude Fractionals
That's it.
That's all the search restrictions I input. Came up with about 1,500 or so boats
Then I started wading through the boat porn of about Low and Behold, around boat 850 or so, I saw the one we bought! It had been advertised for about 8 months, starting at an original price significantly higher than it was now advertised, but I never saw it. Then I used the YW feature to contact the broker . . . crickets
I tried again . . . .still crickets . . . . I finally chased down the actual broker, and sent him an e-mail . . . . He called me 20 minutes later. He said he never got the YW re-directs, and I believe him. It's not the first time I've heard that from legitimate brokers.
Anyway, long story short (too late!) we offered, surveyed, and purchased the boat. After the closing I spoke at length to the broker about why the boat hadn't sold earlier. He said "No interest", no one contacted him . . . although I found out later, after I published a thread about the purchase that at least four other people (3 vary serious) had attempted to obtain info through YW on the boat without success. One DID manage to contact the broker, the same way I did, but ultimately decided not to purchase for personal reasons.
So, the morale of the story is that YW is a tool to help you find a boat, BUT you need to understand it's limitations, and understand that the current owners have very little interest in spending any $$ to correct glaring issues with the platform as long as they and boat trader (also owned by the same consortium) are the two big boys in the field with very little competition . . .