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Go Back   SailNet Community > General Interest Forums > Boat Review and Purchase Forum > Sailboat Design and Construction
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Old 11-25-2007
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Two boats

Are the Serendipity 43 and the Contessa 43 the same hull,outside ? If so, the deck and insides almost double the price of the Contessa.
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Old 11-25-2007
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They will be very similar, especially if they are within a couple of years of each other.

The serendipity hulls were built in New Orleans primarily as race boats. Any that have what you consider to be cruisable interiors have likely been modified.

The Contessas were built as production boats, with an eye to a different market. As you have noted the deck and interiors are quite different, it's possible that the construction techniques and materials differ as well.

Old race boats always sell relatively cheap.. it's a way to get a lot of boat (and good deck gear) for your money. But pipe berths, empty caverns forward of the mast don't sell well to the cruising set.

The good news is that the race boat won't have any molded liners, so if you're so inclined, you have almost limitless options with respect to updating/rebuilding/redesigning the interiors of these boats. Many of them though will not have cockpits that would be comfortable for cruising.

I should perhaps add that we owned a Choate 40 (with similar raceboat heritage) for 12 years. It had been somewhat "cruisified" when we bought it, and over the years we upgraded and improved it more. In the end we sold it for nearly what we paid originally (not counting upgrades - but still - 12 years of use and enjoyment factors in)

I strongly believe that we had a much better sailing boat, with better gear than we could have had in that size range of production boat for the money we paid. I would not be reluctant to go that route again providing the builder was reputable and the boat had not been abused or neglected.

Last edited by Faster; 11-25-2007 at 10:26 PM.
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Old 11-26-2007
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Most of the Serendipity 43's were built as grand prix level IOR boats. They were pretty fragile and seen as nearly disposable since annual changes in the IOR rule made them obsolete nearly a year later. This was reflected in the build quality; these were comparatively fragile boats built for one single purpose winning races. (There was a rarer racer-cruiser version but they weren't any more robust than the full race version) The Serendipities were build during the worst era of the IOR rule and there is nothing so obsolete as an obsolete race boat.

If I remember the Contessa 43 (I have never actually seen one in person so I am recalling literature and judging by my personal experience with the Contessa 33's, which I raced for 8 years, and Contessa 35's that I know much better), these were substantially heavier boats and fitted out as very nicely finished racer-cruisers with reasonable accomodations and more robust construction.

If you tried to take a Serendity and turn it into a Contessa, you could easy spend far more than double what the you could buy the Serendity for. Other than that, price differences may reflect condition, upgrades and equipage. After all these are nearly 30 year old boats.

Jeff
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Old 11-26-2007
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Thanks for your answers. Now, how do you think Gary Mull's Kalik43 measures up to these other two ?
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