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1996 Carver 355 ???

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tonyiiiafl
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1996 Carver 355 ???

Postby tonyiiiafl » November 22nd, 2015, 2:19 pm

We are in final stages of negotiations on a 1996 Carver 355. As we have walked the decks a bit, I noticed that the flybridge area has a bit of "bounce" to it. I saw or felt none on the aft sundeck or the lower main salon level. HAs anyone ever experienced this? I am 230 LBS and I "jumped" on the deck and it shook a bit. Could this be delamination or am I just paranoid? ANY info would be great!

Tony

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Re: 1996 Carver 355 ???

Postby waybomb » November 22nd, 2015, 2:40 pm

I would have the surveyor give extra focus to that area. Could be a delam or soaked coring.
Thanks
Fred
1969 Glaspar Avalon /1969 Johnson Electromatic 85
1987 Carver Mariner
1988 Cougar Kevlar 46' with triple blown 572 ci
1995 Boston Whaler Rage
Past - 1988 2807, 1989 4207 Aft

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Re: 1996 Carver 355 ???

Postby Viper » November 22nd, 2015, 7:30 pm

230 lbs jumping around will cause a little deflection but I'd take Fred's advise and have a surveyor assess. You should be getting him to go over the entire boat anyway.
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Topic author United States of America
tonyiiiafl
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Re: 1996 Carver 355 ???

Postby tonyiiiafl » November 23rd, 2015, 5:10 am

A survey is a MUST! I was just asking if anyone may have an inkling if this is a normal thing on a CMY before spending the $600.00 to tell me what I may already know. Looks like a great boat with only 236 hours on it. We shall see!
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Re: 1996 Carver 355 ???

Postby bud37 » November 23rd, 2015, 11:20 am

There is something you could do to help yourself .......we bought a good moisture meter and practised with it.....that way you can find areas of concern or just flat reject a boat before you get the surveyor involved.......that being said we still had a boat fail a survey even after doing all that.( stringers and rudder supports) almost impossible to check properly with a meter.....sounds like you may have a gut feeling though, hope it works out ,that is low hours for a 20 year old boat....
The above is strictly my opinion always based on years of doing...remember to support local business , it pays back.

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Re: 1996 Carver 355 ???

Postby Viper » November 23rd, 2015, 3:14 pm

While the surveyor may charge a minimum for coming out, you can point out the areas of concern that you have now and have him check those first. If he says that area is bad, you can have him stop before he spends the whole day on her.
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1996 Carver 355 ???

Postby Lyndon670 » November 29th, 2015, 8:37 pm

No offense to the original poster, but I am still stunned each time I read about someone dropping some serious coin on a boat without first hiring a qualified and reputable surveyor. I am confident in both my mechanical knowledge and my knowledge of marine construction, but I spent $1800 (3x600) on a surveyor to look at potential purchases before I settled on my 506. Money well spent!
Lyndon,
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1996 Carver 355 ???

Postby Viper » November 29th, 2015, 9:32 pm

Lyndon670 wrote:Source of the post No offense to the original poster, but I am still stunned each time I read about someone dropping some serious coin on a boat without first hiring a qualified and reputable surveyor. I am confident in both my mechanical knowledge and my knowledge of marine construction, but I spent $1800 (3x600) on a surveyor to look at potential purchases before I settled on my 506. Money well spent!

+1
As a purchaser, barring any major negative finds that might make you walk away, if nothing else, the deficiencies noted in a good/proper survey can serve as a beneficial tool when negotiating the final price. The negotiated price reduction in consideration of the deficiencies noted almost always exceeds what you've paid the surveyor. And let's not forget that chances are your insurer will want a survey anyway. Heck, from a safety standpoint alone, I'd want to know what I'm in for before I bring my family or anybody else aboard.

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