Tooluser
Flǎneur
Howdy y'all. New owner of a 1980 E-38; I just completed a 1-week shakedown, taking my father on his first sailing trip in the San Juans. But that's the good part. . . .
I'd love some advice.
I recently purchased an E38. After the survey, the vessel sat at the broker's dock for 6 weeks. I purchased it about 2 weeks after the survey.
When I arrived after purchasing the vessel, I found some concerning issues.
It had been apparently untouched, or not profitably touched, since the sea trial. The muffins I'd brought to share with the broker and surveyor were sitting in the galley, covered in mold. I'd even pointed them out as I left.
The shore power was connected, but turned off, as was the battery charger. The AGM house bank was completely dead (as in < 1 volt); I managed to borrow a car battery charger to get it over the hump to the point that the on-board charger could function, and they bulk-charged all night. The forward battery was also completely dead, and the windlass doesn't freewheel, even though I was told it did (we couldn't test it because the battery was dead during the survey, too.) The anchor locker pan had clogged and flooded the forepeak, soaking the mattresses.
The bilge pump turns out to have been off - and necessarily, because it was mis-wired and wouldn't function automatically. It looked brand new. My survey showed the pump as functional, so that's puzzling. THAT one I discovered just in time, along with a bunch of uncapped wires in the bilge. (My shakedown week was a fun blend of great sailing and skinned knuckles and brainstormed repairs, as it should be!)
The leaking water pump also didn't get replaced (I'll be back for more advice there). I think the broker and I may have miscommunicated on this one, though I'm not sure why I'd say "sure don't fix that known bad thing". Let's allow it.
So an uneasy feeling in general, and I'm trying to decide how to handle this. On one hand, I feel like I got 'done' by the broker here (who didn't respond to a single phone call about the batteries, despite their daily text messages and chats throughout the buying process. The broker's new employee was a hero and very friendly). The 400Ah bank didn't last 2 days at a time and I wonder if they're cooked and this sloppy handling of a boat cost me two grand. They were 'brand new' batteries (and still look it). Or maybe they'll be fine after reliable charging for a bit? I will get a SOC system on them soon.
On the other hand - well, it's over, and I've got the boat, let's get on with life, maybe learned an important lesson. Cheap at the price.
I could:
- Call the broker and 'express my concern'. Costs me time, probably gets ignored; low utility.
- Share the story, without naming. Benefits the community.
- Call the broker and ask for $$ for them torching my batteries. Potentially justified, but potentially not.
Right now I'm thinking I'm going to call the broker and make sure they understood what happened and see what their response is.
Thoughts?
I'd love some advice.
I recently purchased an E38. After the survey, the vessel sat at the broker's dock for 6 weeks. I purchased it about 2 weeks after the survey.
When I arrived after purchasing the vessel, I found some concerning issues.
It had been apparently untouched, or not profitably touched, since the sea trial. The muffins I'd brought to share with the broker and surveyor were sitting in the galley, covered in mold. I'd even pointed them out as I left.
The shore power was connected, but turned off, as was the battery charger. The AGM house bank was completely dead (as in < 1 volt); I managed to borrow a car battery charger to get it over the hump to the point that the on-board charger could function, and they bulk-charged all night. The forward battery was also completely dead, and the windlass doesn't freewheel, even though I was told it did (we couldn't test it because the battery was dead during the survey, too.) The anchor locker pan had clogged and flooded the forepeak, soaking the mattresses.
The bilge pump turns out to have been off - and necessarily, because it was mis-wired and wouldn't function automatically. It looked brand new. My survey showed the pump as functional, so that's puzzling. THAT one I discovered just in time, along with a bunch of uncapped wires in the bilge. (My shakedown week was a fun blend of great sailing and skinned knuckles and brainstormed repairs, as it should be!)
The leaking water pump also didn't get replaced (I'll be back for more advice there). I think the broker and I may have miscommunicated on this one, though I'm not sure why I'd say "sure don't fix that known bad thing". Let's allow it.
So an uneasy feeling in general, and I'm trying to decide how to handle this. On one hand, I feel like I got 'done' by the broker here (who didn't respond to a single phone call about the batteries, despite their daily text messages and chats throughout the buying process. The broker's new employee was a hero and very friendly). The 400Ah bank didn't last 2 days at a time and I wonder if they're cooked and this sloppy handling of a boat cost me two grand. They were 'brand new' batteries (and still look it). Or maybe they'll be fine after reliable charging for a bit? I will get a SOC system on them soon.
On the other hand - well, it's over, and I've got the boat, let's get on with life, maybe learned an important lesson. Cheap at the price.
I could:
- Call the broker and 'express my concern'. Costs me time, probably gets ignored; low utility.
- Share the story, without naming. Benefits the community.
- Call the broker and ask for $$ for them torching my batteries. Potentially justified, but potentially not.
Right now I'm thinking I'm going to call the broker and make sure they understood what happened and see what their response is.
Thoughts?