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Old 05 February 2023, 19:33   #1
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Older original tubes vs brand new retube?

Hi all,

Interested in people's opinions of whats better to buy and then re sell. Would you rather have 10 year old original factory fitted hypalon or professionally refitted hypalon tubes?

Do buyers tend to prefer original or prefer the perceived safety of new tubes?

It seems to me post covid a lot of people are re tubing their boats just before selling on I guess in the hope of getting more money by rejuvenating their boat?

Thanks!
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Old 05 February 2023, 21:08   #2
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Hi all,



Interested in people's opinions of whats better to buy and then re sell. Would you rather have 10 year old original factory fitted hypalon or professionally refitted hypalon tubes?



Do buyers tend to prefer original or prefer the perceived safety of new tubes?



It seems to me post covid a lot of people are re tubing their boats just before selling on I guess in the hope of getting more money by rejuvenating their boat?



Thanks!
New tubes every time! assuming they are good quality & well fitted . Tube material has a finite lifespan & new tubes will prolong the life of the boat

Sent from my SM-G950F using RIB Net mobile app
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Old 05 February 2023, 23:33   #3
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Hi all,

Interested in people's opinions of whats better to buy and then re sell. Would you rather have 10 year old original factory fitted hypalon or professionally refitted hypalon tubes?

Do buyers tend to prefer original or prefer the perceived safety of new tubes?
1. New tubes if done properly by a quality supplier with material of equivalent spec to the originals. Things become a bit less clear if it is cheap new tubes v very good old tubes.
2. 10 year old hypalon tubes should have plenty of life left yet. I doubt you'd get your money back on replacing tubes v's resale price.

Quote:
It seems to me post covid a lot of people are re tubing their boats just before selling on I guess in the hope of getting more money by rejuvenating their boat?
Were the tubes knackered though? Have they been in a covid backlog? Have they replaced the tubes and then realised boats are expensive so flogging on?
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Old 06 February 2023, 15:05   #4
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Hello, if the tubes are structurally sound then you can enhance the look and protect the tubes with a paint called 'Ultraflex' check out Ocean Art (protective coatings) for more info
Could be the ideal solution for you
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Old 09 February 2023, 08:18   #5
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Hello, if the tubes are structurally sound then you can enhance the look and protect the tubes with a paint called 'Ultraflex' check out Ocean Art (protective coatings) for more info
Could be the ideal solution for you
Painting the tubes makes the boat value plummet.
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Old 09 February 2023, 08:32   #6
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Hello, if the tubes are structurally sound then you can enhance the look and protect the tubes with a paint called 'Ultraflex' check out Ocean Art (protective coatings) for more info
Could be the ideal solution for you


Lipstick on a pig
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Old 10 February 2023, 08:51   #7
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Lipstick on a pig
Saw quite a lot of that in my younger years....
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Old 10 February 2023, 08:55   #8
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Lipstick on a pig
Thankfully never knowingly been called this.... yet!
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Old 10 February 2023, 09:00   #9
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Painting the tubes makes the boat value plummet.
Whilst I agree bad paint jobs and constant application of paint products are never nice, this paint is very different and its good enough for the NZ coastguard (you can't tar all with the same brush)
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Old 10 February 2023, 09:33   #10
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Whilst I agree bad paint jobs and constant application of paint products are never nice, this paint is very different and its good enough for the NZ coastguard (you can't tar all with the same brush)


It could well be functional & do a good job, and in a commercial/rescue environment it wouldn’t matter. Who cares if the boat plucking you out of the water looks nice or not? But the majority of owners are leisure owners & their boats are their pride & joy, rightly or wrongly, we want our boats to look good. You would only ever paint tubes to solve a problem, usually with porosity, so painted tubes are a big red flag to potential buyers, it screams “knackered tubes”.
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