wooden liveaboard
30K pounds seems like a lot. There are hundreds of 38+ foot boats In
the USA for under that, and a quick search of YachtWorld shows a
number in the UK. For instance, a '97 Dehler 41 asking 29K would be a
fine boat, and more likely to hold its value than an ugly wooden boat.
One point in your calculations: if your cash flow is less with the
glass boat, why not take out a shorter loan? That way you'd be a full
owner or a quality boat in 6-7 years.
* biz wrote, On 3/8/2007 6:55 PM:
Jeff wrote:
It sounds like you don't want a wooden boat because of the aesthetics,
but to save money. So how much do you figure you'll save?
OK, let's do some sums:
Wooden boat:
boat: 12k
survey: 1k
haul-out: 0.3k
initial work: 3k
TOTAL initial outlay: 16.3k
Annual haul-out: 0.3k
Annual work: 3k
Annual insurance: 0.5k
Annual loan repayment: 4.5k
TOTAL annual cost: 8k
End of 3 year loan have asset worth 12k.
GRP/steel boat:
boat: 30k
survey: 0.4k
haul-out: 0.3k
initial work: 0.5k
TOTAL initial outlay: 31.2k
Annual haul-out: 0.1k
Annual work: 1k
Annual insurance: 0.3k
Annual loan repayment: 4.5k
TOTAL annual cost: 5.9k
End of 3 years, have 30% stake in a 30k boat, 7 years left on mortgage.
Figures seem fair? sorry, all these are in pounds sterling. Roughly
double the numbers for $, isn't it these days?
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