Buying a winter boat.
How would you go about purchasing a boat from a private party during winter ? I would like a survey and on water demo ride before buying but most boats are in storage during this time of year. If I wait for better weather some one els e may snatch it up not caring about the demo? Am I being to practical here?
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Originally Posted by smoker62
(Post 3320074)
How would you go about purchasing a boat from a private party during winter ? I would like a survey and on water demo ride before buying but most boats are in storage during this time of year. If I wait for better weather some one els e may snatch it up not caring about the demo? Am I being to practical here?
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Originally Posted by Mastercraft240
(Post 3320096)
If you haven an agreed upon price, have the guy unwrap the boat, de-winterize, and go for the ride. If you're going down and hiring a surveyor ($$$), it shows your commitment to the boat. As long as there no ice, bring a hat, goggles, and a warm coat to your water demo:lolhit:
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1) Put a significant (refundable) deposit on the boat that gets your first right of refusal upon successful sea trial in the spring/when it's together.
or 2) Agree on a price which is caveat emptor and take it home tomorrow, pieces and all. |
If I was sellig mine now, it'd be the 1st one with the cash. If you want to chance it and wait till spring, that's your call, but as a seller, the cash in hand now talks.
You know it is winter time, the motor is not installed. Can't expect a seller to hold on to it till spring if another buyer comes along willing to buy it now. IMO, The refundabale deposit thing is fine when a week or 2 is the time frame, not months. |
Originally Posted by US1 Fountain
(Post 3320174)
If I was sellig mine now, it'd be the 1st one with the cash. If you want to chance it and wait till spring, that's your call, but as a seller, the cash in hand now talks.
You know it is winter time, the motor is not installed. Can't expect a seller to hold on to it till spring if another buyer comes along willing to buy it now. IMO, The refundabale deposit thing is fine when a week or 2 is the time frame, not months. I am not a buyer who will ante up without, at a minimum , a survey, and quite frankly a water test. Just wanted the general consensus on if you more experienced performance boaters think on water tests are a must. I can wait for another boat when water testing is a reality for the seller. There are more for sale every day . |
I understand your reasoning wanting to know full well what your are buying. I'm just pointing out from a sellers point of view. I have to assume if the guy has this boat listed for sale now, he is willing to sell it now as is, otherwise he'd hold out till spring when he can be more accomodating to list it.
Kinda makes you weigh your options if its 'the' boat. :) Good luck |
Originally Posted by US1 Fountain
(Post 3320250)
I understand your reasoning wanting to know full well what your are buying. I'm just pointing out from a sellers point of view. I have to assume if the guy has this boat listed for sale now, he is willing to sell it now as is, otherwise he'd hold out till spring when he can be more accomodating to list it.
Kinda makes you weigh your options if its 'the' boat. :) Good luck |
Sorry for the deleted posts. My computer is freezing and double posting . I feel a crash coming on,:eek:
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Originally Posted by US1 Fountain
(Post 3320250)
I understand your reasoning wanting to know full well what your are buying. I'm just pointing out from a sellers point of view. I have to assume if the guy has this boat listed for sale now, he is willing to sell it now as is, otherwise he'd hold out till spring when he can be more accomodating to list it.
Kinda makes you weigh your options if its 'the' boat. :) Good luck |
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