Re: Should I take this free boat
I do know it is an I/O and I'm pretty sure is a mercruiser. My wife was asking me what I thought it would take $ wise to make it a sea worth boat. I told her I really didn't know, but if I had to take a guess with me doing all the work I could keep it under $5000. Does that sound doable?
Start a cost sheet for the project. Look at the boat, identify everything that will need replacing (seats, bimini top, gauges, carpet, floors, vinyl, cleats, rubrail, fuel tank and lines, controls, steering wheel, helm, steering cable, epoxy, polyester resin, fiberglass, exhaust mainifolds, lower unit, propeller, impeller, battery, lights, hoses, pumps, windshield, etc) and price it out on iboats mall. That should give you a good idea of what the repairs will cost you.
If its more than a few grand, and the boat needs lots of work to look good, I suggest taking the money you would spend on repairs and buy a used boat in good condition that just needs some normal maintenance and cosmetic fix-ups. A used boat in good condition is usually much less money than fixing up a project boat.
If you want to get an idea of what a complete rebuild entails, check out
www.shareaproject.com and look at the boat projects. You will find my 65 MFG there, and a few other notables, like "project long haul" where the floors and many other aspecs of a mid sized bow rider were addressed quite well.
The best work you put into a project is the pre-work when you decide if its for you or not.