I understand the innate nervousness that we feel when viewing a survey and wondering what parts might motivate us to run away or run towards...
I still recall our nervousness when shopping for our first "big boat" in 1994. (Gulp!)
A surveyor that I have known for many years always tries to make it clear that value of the survey is that it gives the boat itself a "voice" as compared to the seller, (wants to move on) the broker, ($$$), and the (often infatuated) buyer.
Also, the survey will layout several basic categories of actual condition: things immediately needed for safety, overdue maintenance to complete in the next year or two, and longer term upgrades and improvements. It will note where the particular make and model falls on the scale of original design and construction "scantlings"... (This is a part of the discussion that some brokers shy away from, for many reasons).
For the vast majority of us, armed with some knowledge and having the benefit of info from sites like this, is that we become contented owner/sailors anyhow!
I still recall our nervousness when shopping for our first "big boat" in 1994. (Gulp!)
A surveyor that I have known for many years always tries to make it clear that value of the survey is that it gives the boat itself a "voice" as compared to the seller, (wants to move on) the broker, ($$$), and the (often infatuated) buyer.
Also, the survey will layout several basic categories of actual condition: things immediately needed for safety, overdue maintenance to complete in the next year or two, and longer term upgrades and improvements. It will note where the particular make and model falls on the scale of original design and construction "scantlings"... (This is a part of the discussion that some brokers shy away from, for many reasons).
For the vast majority of us, armed with some knowledge and having the benefit of info from sites like this, is that we become contented owner/sailors anyhow!
