Lou C
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2002
- Messages
- 13,055
All 'glass boats especially from the 80s and 90s before the change over to composite construction not using as much wood. Any boat I didn't know the history of that's of that vintage would be suspect to me. I would not buy it without taking it to my favorite fiberglass guy right here in Long Island, I'd gladly pay him to look at it.Hm. Is this a bayliner specific thing, or are all glass boats not great after 15 years or so? That seems... not ideal. Like it's just not worth looking at a glass boat older than about 2010? I feel like there are a lot of 90s, 80s, even 70s boats running around out there. Should I be avoiding most or all of them? Thanks
If I were to buy a used 'glass boat, ideally it would be 5-7 years old, used but not used up. Most old 'glass + wood boats are used up, you just don't know it till the deck gets springy.