What is considered low hours on a boat? In a vehicle, 12k miles year seems the accepted mileage, and anything much below that is typically considered "low miles". What's the equivelant for boats?
I see some 10 year old boats that have 40 hours, 70 hours, etc., and that seems like pretty low hours. Then I see others that say "low hours", and I'm calling and they're telling me 200, 250, or 300 hours.
I know this is just generalizations, but I think most people expect to begin seeing trouble in their cars at over the 100k mark. What is that threshold for boat engines? I know I'm just generalizing, heck I've got a toyota pickup with 160k on it that has never given me a lick of trouble because I care for it well (and I know the same can apply for boats) but I hope you see what I'm looking for here.
When does "low hours" become "above average" and become a bargaining chip or cause for concern? I'm looking at 8 to 12 year old boats, I/O drive mostly.
Thanks.
I see some 10 year old boats that have 40 hours, 70 hours, etc., and that seems like pretty low hours. Then I see others that say "low hours", and I'm calling and they're telling me 200, 250, or 300 hours.
I know this is just generalizations, but I think most people expect to begin seeing trouble in their cars at over the 100k mark. What is that threshold for boat engines? I know I'm just generalizing, heck I've got a toyota pickup with 160k on it that has never given me a lick of trouble because I care for it well (and I know the same can apply for boats) but I hope you see what I'm looking for here.
When does "low hours" become "above average" and become a bargaining chip or cause for concern? I'm looking at 8 to 12 year old boats, I/O drive mostly.
Thanks.