So, on the Great Loop thread, I was told that I had volunteered myself to create a boat restoration thread for my new acquisition, which we named the Inconseavable - so here is that thread.
A little backstory on how I ended up with this boat:
In late October of last year, I was watching Wicked Tuna Outer Banks, and was drooling over the sportfishers, which have always been my dream boat for as long as I can remember. Of course, when I was in high school and college, these were priced WAY out of any potential budget I had, or at that time thought I would ever achieve. I decided to do something stupid; I opened up boattrader.com and started looking - just looking, as I told myself.
I was expecting to see all of these around 200+ thousand, I didn't have any idea what they were running these days - I have a 22 ft center console Hydrasport, and that was really as fancy as I had looked for. I've had it for about 20 years now, and bought it from a guy getting a divorce. Looking back, I think I paid 12K for it.
So anyway, i see a 46 ft Post for about $58K in Seabrook. I figure, what the heck, I'll go look at it. Convince the little lady and we head down to take a look. That boat was straight up rotten. literally big gaping rotten holes in the back wall of the Salon. Quickly let the seller know I am not interested, and start the drive home (I'm in Lake Charles). On the way, take another look and se e a43 foot Post in Aransas Pass (Yes, I like Posts). This one listed for $55K, but indicates there is a problem with the Port Transmission, and that the boat needs some love. I contact the broker, and he doesn't know what is wrong with the transmission, and quickly starts pushing me to look at the boat. I decline, but do let him know that if he sees any screaming deals, to not hesitate to email me.
3 days later, he let's me know that same boat is listed for 27.5K. I say what the heck, we'll go look. Make the 5.5 hour drive to Aransas Pass, meet the seller's agent and look at the boat. Hull is in fantastic shape, but needs new flooring throughout, a new salon window (hurricane damage), and the port transmission, as noted before was bad. Still, at 27.5, I'm considering it. She then tells me that she believes that is I offer 15K, he'll take it. For that price, if the mechanical inspection goes well (minus the one transmission of course), I decide that I would offer, not really believing that offer would be accepted. Formal offer submitted, and within an hour, I was under contract.3 weeks later, I own a boat bigger than any I ever thought I would.
Pros of the boat - Hull is great, both engines rebuilt with approximately 200 hours on each. Starboard transmission working great, and fluid testing is spectacularly good. All electrical seems to work (still figuring out all the switches), bilges work great, so does A/C. Brand new refrigerator. Does come with outriggers, not currently on the boat.
Cons - Bad transmission needing rebuild, needs new flooring, needs a real good cleaning, and for our taste, restaining the interior. Also, no furniture in the salon. Marine electronics are ancient - probably from 1986 with the boat (ok, not that old, but old).
And that is the beginning of the story. I will update as I work on the restoration process.
A little backstory on how I ended up with this boat:
In late October of last year, I was watching Wicked Tuna Outer Banks, and was drooling over the sportfishers, which have always been my dream boat for as long as I can remember. Of course, when I was in high school and college, these were priced WAY out of any potential budget I had, or at that time thought I would ever achieve. I decided to do something stupid; I opened up boattrader.com and started looking - just looking, as I told myself.
I was expecting to see all of these around 200+ thousand, I didn't have any idea what they were running these days - I have a 22 ft center console Hydrasport, and that was really as fancy as I had looked for. I've had it for about 20 years now, and bought it from a guy getting a divorce. Looking back, I think I paid 12K for it.
So anyway, i see a 46 ft Post for about $58K in Seabrook. I figure, what the heck, I'll go look at it. Convince the little lady and we head down to take a look. That boat was straight up rotten. literally big gaping rotten holes in the back wall of the Salon. Quickly let the seller know I am not interested, and start the drive home (I'm in Lake Charles). On the way, take another look and se e a43 foot Post in Aransas Pass (Yes, I like Posts). This one listed for $55K, but indicates there is a problem with the Port Transmission, and that the boat needs some love. I contact the broker, and he doesn't know what is wrong with the transmission, and quickly starts pushing me to look at the boat. I decline, but do let him know that if he sees any screaming deals, to not hesitate to email me.
3 days later, he let's me know that same boat is listed for 27.5K. I say what the heck, we'll go look. Make the 5.5 hour drive to Aransas Pass, meet the seller's agent and look at the boat. Hull is in fantastic shape, but needs new flooring throughout, a new salon window (hurricane damage), and the port transmission, as noted before was bad. Still, at 27.5, I'm considering it. She then tells me that she believes that is I offer 15K, he'll take it. For that price, if the mechanical inspection goes well (minus the one transmission of course), I decide that I would offer, not really believing that offer would be accepted. Formal offer submitted, and within an hour, I was under contract.3 weeks later, I own a boat bigger than any I ever thought I would.
Pros of the boat - Hull is great, both engines rebuilt with approximately 200 hours on each. Starboard transmission working great, and fluid testing is spectacularly good. All electrical seems to work (still figuring out all the switches), bilges work great, so does A/C. Brand new refrigerator. Does come with outriggers, not currently on the boat.
Cons - Bad transmission needing rebuild, needs new flooring, needs a real good cleaning, and for our taste, restaining the interior. Also, no furniture in the salon. Marine electronics are ancient - probably from 1986 with the boat (ok, not that old, but old).
And that is the beginning of the story. I will update as I work on the restoration process.