starcraftkid
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2010
- Messages
- 238
I took a ride last week with a buddy who's been looking for a trailer and motor for his 22' Chieftain, he told me he found a 'junk' boat with a late model motor and year old trailer and wanted me to check it out.
When we got there I couldn't help but notice a rather clean 22' Islander sitting next to a garage uncovered.
I checked the engine compression for him and found all to be in order. The engine is a 2009 Yamaha 250 4 stroke. The trailer is a near new C channel frame Sea Lion Tandem bunk trailer. I started to dig around in the boat and was surprised at how clean the boat still was. The cabin is really decent, the deck is soft but only at the stern, and the seats are both shot.
He made a deal on the boat, he got it for $9,500 flat and we towed it back to his place. It was far more than I'd ever spent on a boat or car, but when you figure someone paid over $4400 for the trailer and $14,500 for the motor just last June, its a deal. Personally, I've never spent more than $1000 to buy a turn key boat, and most of my boats were either free or close to it but all were projects to some degree. The only boat I ever bought that was turn key and perfect, I got so cheap I just had to flip it for the big profit last spring.
I went over there today and found the motor on his Chieftain, and the trailer under it. The Islander is sitting on two logs propped up with bails of cardboard. When I asked what he planned to do with the boat, he said he's got no clue, he don't like the cabin style, and has no plans to use the boat. He mentioned even cutting it up for scrap. For right now he's got it way down back on his property sitting in the woods, uncovered and he don't care. He sees no value in it.
For me, it's too big, I like the boat but owning a 22' anything would mean buying a heavier tow vehicle, and with gas at $3.77/gal., that's not going to happen.
I don't want to feed the tow vehicle or a 22' boat.
What is a decent 22' Islander hull worth? The boat is late 70's, I think 78 or 79 or there about and he's got the title. I'd like to see it find a new home but after seeing reelfishin not being able to find a home for a complete boat and trailer, I doubt anyone would pony up even scrap value on an Islander?
When I mentioned him just selling it he felt the same way, he figured it's worth more as a chicken coop or even a shed to store things under if he flipped it over.
To me that's just wrong. The worst part is that the boat came from a lake in PA, it's a super clean freshwater run boat, it even looks good. He did have someone spot it from the road and stop and ask about it but they offered only $300, that only pissed him off. I think if it were mine, it would have to be worth at least $1,500 just because it's a clean hull that's not dented or corroded from saltwater. Plus, it's an outboard hull. The drawbacks of course would be that it needs an expensive trailer, clean tandem trailers for a 22' boat are few and far between used. There's a ton of 19-20 trailers out there but anything larger is rare in good shape. Also, it would need at least a 200hp motor, and I don't think there's room to mount two smaller outboards?
A pair of 115hp outboards would be nice if they would fit.
Something that really amazed me in the first place was that for one the seller dumped the boat cheap but he did say he was close to losing his house, but even more so, that the boat had been listed for sale for months and he had not one single other person reply to the ad or call. He had listed the boat, motor and trailer since Dec. for $10,000, plus two other ads for the motor alone at $5,500, and the trailer at $2,500, and the boat listed alone at $2500. None of his ads drew any response. The boat was loaded with a complete modern electronics set up, complete with radar, fish finders, GPS, chart plotter, VHF radio etc. All of the electronics were also new in 2010, They all got transferred over to the other boat. The simple fact that no one just bought the boat to resell the new components just boggles my mind.
When we got there I couldn't help but notice a rather clean 22' Islander sitting next to a garage uncovered.
I checked the engine compression for him and found all to be in order. The engine is a 2009 Yamaha 250 4 stroke. The trailer is a near new C channel frame Sea Lion Tandem bunk trailer. I started to dig around in the boat and was surprised at how clean the boat still was. The cabin is really decent, the deck is soft but only at the stern, and the seats are both shot.
He made a deal on the boat, he got it for $9,500 flat and we towed it back to his place. It was far more than I'd ever spent on a boat or car, but when you figure someone paid over $4400 for the trailer and $14,500 for the motor just last June, its a deal. Personally, I've never spent more than $1000 to buy a turn key boat, and most of my boats were either free or close to it but all were projects to some degree. The only boat I ever bought that was turn key and perfect, I got so cheap I just had to flip it for the big profit last spring.
I went over there today and found the motor on his Chieftain, and the trailer under it. The Islander is sitting on two logs propped up with bails of cardboard. When I asked what he planned to do with the boat, he said he's got no clue, he don't like the cabin style, and has no plans to use the boat. He mentioned even cutting it up for scrap. For right now he's got it way down back on his property sitting in the woods, uncovered and he don't care. He sees no value in it.
For me, it's too big, I like the boat but owning a 22' anything would mean buying a heavier tow vehicle, and with gas at $3.77/gal., that's not going to happen.
I don't want to feed the tow vehicle or a 22' boat.
What is a decent 22' Islander hull worth? The boat is late 70's, I think 78 or 79 or there about and he's got the title. I'd like to see it find a new home but after seeing reelfishin not being able to find a home for a complete boat and trailer, I doubt anyone would pony up even scrap value on an Islander?
When I mentioned him just selling it he felt the same way, he figured it's worth more as a chicken coop or even a shed to store things under if he flipped it over.
To me that's just wrong. The worst part is that the boat came from a lake in PA, it's a super clean freshwater run boat, it even looks good. He did have someone spot it from the road and stop and ask about it but they offered only $300, that only pissed him off. I think if it were mine, it would have to be worth at least $1,500 just because it's a clean hull that's not dented or corroded from saltwater. Plus, it's an outboard hull. The drawbacks of course would be that it needs an expensive trailer, clean tandem trailers for a 22' boat are few and far between used. There's a ton of 19-20 trailers out there but anything larger is rare in good shape. Also, it would need at least a 200hp motor, and I don't think there's room to mount two smaller outboards?
A pair of 115hp outboards would be nice if they would fit.
Something that really amazed me in the first place was that for one the seller dumped the boat cheap but he did say he was close to losing his house, but even more so, that the boat had been listed for sale for months and he had not one single other person reply to the ad or call. He had listed the boat, motor and trailer since Dec. for $10,000, plus two other ads for the motor alone at $5,500, and the trailer at $2,500, and the boat listed alone at $2500. None of his ads drew any response. The boat was loaded with a complete modern electronics set up, complete with radar, fish finders, GPS, chart plotter, VHF radio etc. All of the electronics were also new in 2010, They all got transferred over to the other boat. The simple fact that no one just bought the boat to resell the new components just boggles my mind.