swampyankee
Veteran Member
Any love for the Corinthian 38 here?
We're still fiddling with our Silverton 31, but like any boater, dreaming about the next one. I'm thinking 35-38 foot for the next one, and the Corinthian 38 has caught my eye. Accommodations look great and it even has a small aft cockpit for boarding, line handling and dinghy load and launch. They seem to be a bit of a white elephant, not quite trawler, not quite MY, almost a houseboat (but isn't that half of what Trawler-boating is all about. I know, I know, twin 454's, but having a twin screw already, I'm ok with that. I'd run at trawler speeds to minimize the fuel consumption.
Anyone know where they were built? What hull form it is? How the hull and decks have endured?
There is a '70's model offered by a two-boat owner for pretty cheap. We're going to look just to get a feel for the layout, etc. And it's a 70's Chris Craft. They had a good rep back them for building solid boats.
We're still fiddling with our Silverton 31, but like any boater, dreaming about the next one. I'm thinking 35-38 foot for the next one, and the Corinthian 38 has caught my eye. Accommodations look great and it even has a small aft cockpit for boarding, line handling and dinghy load and launch. They seem to be a bit of a white elephant, not quite trawler, not quite MY, almost a houseboat (but isn't that half of what Trawler-boating is all about. I know, I know, twin 454's, but having a twin screw already, I'm ok with that. I'd run at trawler speeds to minimize the fuel consumption.
Anyone know where they were built? What hull form it is? How the hull and decks have endured?
There is a '70's model offered by a two-boat owner for pretty cheap. We're going to look just to get a feel for the layout, etc. And it's a 70's Chris Craft. They had a good rep back them for building solid boats.