For that price you KNOW there's some problems, but then again you're skilled at working on them. As long as compression is good and transom and stringers are solid, there's nothing that you can't fix that's not worthwhile at that price.
I think you asking for trouble..
In all honesty, You are going to spend alot of time fixing rather than fishing on a 2,400 dollar boat. That's OK if that's what you want to do. I would suspect a soft deck, bad stringers and a weak transom. Like I said, depends on how many free hours you have. Be ready to dump thousands into it.
Soon to be 30 years old
Quote from: paul-e on November 29, 2011, 01:29:30 AMSoon to be 30 years old Hey, so is mine For someone with the talent and means to fix and maintain, a 30 year old boat is fine.
Quote from: paul-e on November 29, 2011, 01:29:30 AMSoon to be 30 years old Hey, so is mine
If you have the time to play with it, its a great deal. Some people like to spend very little on a boat, then re-do it to their liking. If you add new or pre owned power to it for $8,000, now you have a good working boat for about $10K,
the only other option is find a boat in your price range, then get it surveyed and hope you don't have much work to do with it. Everything is a gamble. My Grady has twin 200's but they are from 1995. They are almost 17 years old. I got them surveyed and they looked good with approx 300 or less hours on them, so I took the gamble. I ran it for 2 seasons, and so far, so good. They are difficult to start in the cold, but they are older 2 strokes, so I expect that. When they are warmed up, first crank every time. If this boat looks good, minus the power, just re power it with a warrentee and your good to go..
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