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I am looking to buy my very first sail boat, and like so many others, I dont want to spend a lot of money, but of course want the most/best I can get.
I have an opportunity to buy a 1986 Beneteau first 26 at what i think is a very reasonable price - $3000.
The boat does have work, but mainly cosmetic (i.e. the cabin liner is falling off).
I cant see any problems with standing rigging but the jib halyard is stuck - it looks like it came off the wheel at the top of the mast.
Sails look pretty good.
I cant see any soft spots on the deck, although one of the safety rail stanchions is loose - it looks like the screws just pulled out as I cant see any crack or break in the fiberglass.
The boat has been on the water for the last 3 or 4 years. There is no signs of major water ingress or standing water except for some water streaks below the cabin windows - the plexiglass has cracks around the screws holding the windows.
Any concerns potentially under the water line?
I will sail on inland waters - or rather I intend to learn to sail on inland waters.
I would appreciate your thoughts on this boat and also if anyone can point me to any source of information on this boat.
I have a 26 foot Etap, that I paid a little more than that for. It needed a little work, and I am very handy. I sailed it home from the Chesapeake about 285 miles. It has been since been onshore for the past three years, after I discovered it had a serious keel problem. I thought I could fix it over the winter, but one thing led to another, and life gets in the way too. I've been paying for it to sit in a marina and driving an hour each way to get about 4 hours work done infrequently. Deterioration from just sitting is almost outrunning me at the moment. My wife says I'm out about 30K so far, she's exaggerating I think, but who's going to argue the point? Not me!
So I'd really advise that you look again, then get a survey if you are still interested. What you want to know is, is the boat used or USED UP. Mine was used up. Also remember that everything you buy for your $3000 boat is actually a part for a 50,000? boat, and costs that way.
Thanks for the thoughts. Your situation is exactly what I'm afraid of, but oh well, its to late now, I just bought the boat.
I've been waiting a long time to get into sailing and I'll keep optimistic - until proven otherwise, and probably beyond.... - that its not going to happen to me.
Included in the buy is 6 months free docking. I'll spend the rest of the summer to clean up the boat, service the motor (Unfortunately its not the Yanmar diesel but a 9.9. Nissan outboard), replace running rigging and generally just be happy with the boat.
Come winter I'll have her pulled and then i'll know more about the bottom.
Here's to first boat optimism
What issue do you have with your boat's keel? I know i'll be dead if I get to the $30K mark, although I'm sure my wife already sees that number in the not too distant future...
Pieter,
My boat is an Etap 26 with a retractable bulb keel. Etap made a major design mistake in that the keel trunk which extends from the hull to the deck. It is not properly tied into the stringers fore and aft. So the keel trunk has sunk one full inch into the hull, taking the deck around the mast with it. What made it critical to repair was that the deck didn't move straight down, it tilted forward along with the mast step. The mast step contains the screw drive for the keel, and the keel stopped retracting shortly after I bought the boat. The previous owner only retracted if he ran aground. I sail in a area where I need to retract the keel about 12 inches most of the time to avoid running aground. So I had no choice but to fix it. The fix turned out to be more than four times more work than I estimated. If I had it to do over I'd do the repair in a completely different way, but I will NEVER do this again! Because the boat hasn't been sailing, but I am still paying marina fees year after year, I could easily have paid far more for a boat that I actually got to use!
I'm glad to see your boat has an outboard. The good news is that a sailboat with a bad outboard is still worth quite a lot, and a new outboard is $2K to $3K. If you have an inboard replacing the engine looks more like $8K to $12K. So if the engine dies while you own the boat you would take a huge hit. My boat came with an inflatable dinghy that leaks air badly, but it has an almost new 8 Hp outboard, the 'spare' for my inboard!
I was lucky to find this boat. Patience paid off!
The boat had the standard Beneteau disease of sagging, rotting headliner. The teak was in real bad shape, the windows was totally messed up and she was just plain dirty.
Removing the old rotten foam backed vinyl proved to be the worst of the work I had to do - very dirty and nasty. If you have to do this, wear a respirator and Tyvek suite!!
I replaced with Sailrite's hull blanket headliner. Good stuff and it looks really nice.
In addition to the liner, I replaced all exterior teak, the windows, navigation lights and electrical wiring. I also dropped the mast and replaced all sheaths and running rigging and generally just cleaned her up.
Northcave, if you need any more detail, pm me. I'll be glad to share.
Too much sail up hum ...I don't resist to tell you a story with that guy that I know that sails a Benetau 26.
He was solo sailing in a beautiful day, on passage, flying a spinnaker with not too much wind. The sun was so good that he undressed and went naked for a tan with the exception of a small towel around his head, to protect from the sun (he is bald).
The wind pick up and we has happy having fun…and then the wind got really strong and he was going surfing at more than 10K and the auto pilot could not cope anymore. Not a problem he thought he was having even more fun….well to cut it short, the wind only died late in the night and he remained naked, only with a short towel, half frozen at the tiller till the conditions permit him to lower safely the spinnaker…and of course without damaging it.
I can't Pm because I don't have enough posts unfortunately. Is yours the lifting keel version and did you bother getting beaching legs for it? Also have you got any documentation on it like the original owners manual?
I don't have the exact number, but it's about 5'8".
I'm 5'11" and I always had a crick in my neck after a weekend on the boat standing with my head on my shoulder.
She is an awesome boat though. Sails like a dream - fast.
A family member had a Beneteau 393 as her 2nd boat. They sailed all over the Bahamas and Caribbean and loved it. At 39' it was big enough for the two of them but not too big.
I had a lighter cloth 165% on my boat. It was not light as in a gennaker - probably about 6oz.
The boat got pretty quickly overpowered with this sail, and as it was hanked on I couldn't just roll it in. It made for some exiting times [emoji16]
Im sure any sailmaker would be pleased to help you out if you want a new sail, or of course you can probably get a suitable sail on fleabay.
By the way, I still have a brand new furling headsail (i wanted to convert to roller furling but sold the boat before I ever used the sail). I can't recall the dimensions, but if yore interested I'll have a look
Thanks Pete,
Sure I would be interested in knowing more about your headsail size. What year & weight is the sail?
thanks
-Laura
(ldunn06@gmail.com)
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