Preface

Updated 2006-02-21 21:00

In 1997 my wife and I were in the market for a motor cruiser. By chance we came across one of the very few Chris Craft 31´ Commanders known to exist in the country. It was a beautiful boat, totally restored two years earlier. We fell in love with it from the very first moment.

The restoration covered every aspect, the interior the hardware, the engines. After the restoration it was hardly used at all, hence the asking price was very high, at least in our eyes and at that time. In fact, so did the rest of the market as we learned that the boat had been for sale at a brokerage for almost a year.

 

The following development of events was inevitable. While we struggled to make up our mind Louise III was sold right in front of our eyes to another buyer.

 

 

Found & Bought on the Net

From that moment on we could not see ourselves owning another kind of boat, We tried to get some Swedish yacht brokers to find one for us, but without luck. It became apparent that the only way would be to try to locate a boat in USA and import to Sweden ourselves.

 

We spent a full Sunday afternoon in March 1998 on the net, surfing around among various American yacht brokers, doing queries in databases and filling in information requests. We were quite surprised when we received e-mail responses from no less than four brokers within the next 24 hours. Buying a boat on the net may not raise eye brows today, but back in 1998 most people hadn't even bought a CD on the net, let alone a boat from another continent!

 

Susan BIII "Sails" for Sweden

As it turned out, a Commander 31' in S:t Peterburg , Florida named Susan B III seemed to give us the best value for money.

 

Since we were planning on letting the boat of our choice go through a major restoration in Sweden we were not too concerned about the condition of the boat itself and its equipment. For us it was sufficient that the boat structurally undamaged, and that most of it's original hardware were still on board. However, a boat that is well maintained usually do not have any hidden defects, so Susan B III would probably be a good choice.

 

So via F:t Lauderdale and a transatlantic cargo ship Susan BIII arrived in Gothenburg and was put on a trailer to travel some 450 km to Södertälje and the Wasa Yacht shipyard.

 

 

Restoration Objective

During the summer of 1998 we spent a lot of time planning the upcoming restoration in great detail. 

We had no intention to restore Susan B III to 100% original condition. At the time it would have been an impossible mission. We were on the wrong side of the Atlantic , and things like eBay was nowhere near as useful tool as it is today. I would have been to time consuming and too costly to try to find all replacement parts, materials etc. 

 

On the other hand we wanted have the feeling of a new boat and at the same time preserve the look and feel of a Chris Craft classic.

 

In September 1998 we turned her over to Wasa Yachts, a shipyard specialized in building premium sailing yachts and also in restoring boats.

 

The restoration story itself  and detailed descriptions of the many special solutions developed during and after the main restoration is available in the Solutions section.

 

 

The starting point of it all

Louise III for sale at Marinmäklarna, Stockholm, Sweden. She was sold to another happy buyer, but she ingited our desire for something similar.

 

YachtBrokerageUSA_Ad.jpg (147321 byte)             SusanBIII_Advert.jpg (138907 byte)

It's all in the ads

One of the companies we contacted was Yacht Brokerage USA. We found their ad (left) in the magazine Yacht Trader wich in turn lead us to their site at Yacht World (right). Click to enlarge.

Thousands of Miles Later...

Like a mumified whale Susan BIII arrived at the Wasa Yachts Shipyard on a drizzly cold and utterly unpleasant (but yet typical) Swedish Mid-June day.

Unwrapping a giant gift

The first look what she actually looked like in real life. By no means a gem, but not to bad either!.

 

 

Looks good from far, but was far from good

As it turned out Susan B III was really worn by Swedish standards. Very dirty, full of Florida sand, the chrome was gone, somthing resembling gelcoat was still in evidence here and there , batteries flat, engines "tired". BUT, she had potential to become a beauty!

 

 

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