25thmustang
Lieutenant Commander
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2008
- Messages
- 1,849
So I have the 34'er that we use all season. The negatives are it's just not practical for early or late season runs (when she's out if the water) and there have been a few times the big hit and the boats on land. So my thought was to pick up a smaller trailer boat. I have the make/model I am interested in... Wellcraft 248/250 sportsman/offshore. The cabin layout is perfect and the size + outboard power is what I want.
The vintage wellcrafts (who are we kidding, any boat this age) run the risk of rotted transom, stringers, etc... You can snag these boats for prices all over the map, from free projects, to $15,000 clean examples.
Here is the question. Let's say you check out one and it looks to be solid. Stringers, transom, bulkheads (you can see) fuel tank... Survey shows it's alright. How much faith do you put in that the boat truly is not wet anywhere and that your going to get 5-10+ years out of the hull?
My thoughts are the only real way to be certain, is to rip into one of these projects with the thought that your doing it all from scratch. New stringers, bulkheads, transom, check it replace fuel tank, wiring...
One thing to note, I'm more experienced on the larger boat where you an really check the structure well, and my transom isn't wood verse something where floors and decks block most of your view. If your survey says stringers he can see are good, do you assume everything you can't see is also good?
Feel free to chime in however you see fit!
The vintage wellcrafts (who are we kidding, any boat this age) run the risk of rotted transom, stringers, etc... You can snag these boats for prices all over the map, from free projects, to $15,000 clean examples.
Here is the question. Let's say you check out one and it looks to be solid. Stringers, transom, bulkheads (you can see) fuel tank... Survey shows it's alright. How much faith do you put in that the boat truly is not wet anywhere and that your going to get 5-10+ years out of the hull?
My thoughts are the only real way to be certain, is to rip into one of these projects with the thought that your doing it all from scratch. New stringers, bulkheads, transom, check it replace fuel tank, wiring...
One thing to note, I'm more experienced on the larger boat where you an really check the structure well, and my transom isn't wood verse something where floors and decks block most of your view. If your survey says stringers he can see are good, do you assume everything you can't see is also good?
Feel free to chime in however you see fit!