Sale!

NoRSRV-Built 2Swedish Nautical Standards AWESOME RACER CRUISER-CarbonFiber Sails

$1,520.43

63

  • Make: DESIGNED BY PETER NORLIN - BUILT BY ALBIN YACHTS
  • Keel: Fixed
  • Engine Make: Yamaha
  • Model: Cumulus 283 Racer Cruiser- Perfect Family Cruiser
  • Length (feet): 28.3
  • Engine Type: Single Outboard
  • Condition: INCREDIBLE SWEDISH BUILT RACER CRUISER SAILBOAT IS DESIGNED & BUILT TO EXACTING EUROPEAN NAUTICAL STANDARDS. IT HAS WON MANY RACES IN ITS DAY. IT WAS RELIABLY ONE OF 2 TOP FINISHERS FOR RACES AT THE YACHT CLUB. RELATIVELY GOOD CONDITION EXCEPT THE RUDDER TIP NEEDS TO BE REBUILT. LARGE SELF TAILING PRIMARY WINCHES PLUS SEVERAL ADDITIONAL SECONDARY WINCHES (SEE PHOTOS) Davis range finder. CARBON FIBER SAILS VALUED AT $6500 NEW. SYNTHETIC, WATER RESISTANT WOOD FLOOR WAS INSTALLED ABOUT 2 YEARS AGO. MAIN SAIL IN GOOD CONDITION. GENOA #1, #2, #3 IN GOOD CONDITION2 SPINNAKERS IN GOOD CONDITION. SPINNAKER POLE IN GOOD CONDITION winch handles, Locking winch handles Hydraulic raising and lowering outboard motor mount with awesome 9.9 HP electric start 4 stroke motor runs perfectly. Aluminum sail tracks, plastic hose vents, turning blocks. Needs new clip on plastic cars on the main sail. About a $30 to buy those. Call with any questions Will 970 319-6408 Incredible value priced below 12K.
  • Type: Cruiser
  • Year: 1982
  • Rigging: Sloop, Cutter
  • Deposit amount: 1000.0
  • Primary Fuel Type: Gas
  • Deposit type: 1
  • Beam (feet): 9.6
  • For Sale By: Private Seller
  • Hull Material: Solid Hand Laid Woven Roving Fiberglass
  • Trailer: Not Included

Description

PLEASE
READ FULL DESCRIPTION FOR ALL THE DETAILS ON THIS AMAZING VESSEL.
PREVIOUS OWNER HAS AN ENTIRE CLOSET FULL OF TROPHIES FROM ALL THE RACES HE WON IN THIS BOAT BUT NOW IN HIS 80’S HIS FAMILY ENCOURAGED HIM TO TAKE ON OTHER LESS PHYSICAL HOBBIES THAN SAILING.
Beautiful
Spacious interior sleeps 5. These vessels handle very well in all
wind conditions and are built to win cruising races as well as being
capable smaller sized ocean cruisers for weekend family coastal
cruising or for longer term cruising for a couple or for single
handing. They handle like a dream and sail to weather cutting through
chop and swell without pounding as some of the flatter bottom vessels
do. They are incredibly strong boats as well, as you might expect
from a company with a 121 year legacy building vessels for the north
seas of Scandinavia.
THIS
AUCTION CLOSES JUST AFTER 9 am EASTERN TIME ON FRIDAY. If
you truly intend to win the auction make sure to get your best bid in
early or else stay up and set the alarm on your phone to tune in for
the final few minutes of bidding. Catch up on the late night TV jokes
while you wait for the auction. Sometimes the final few minutes can
determine who wins the auction.
PAYMENT
DUE WITHIN 24 HOURS FOR THIS OPPORTUNITY AUCTION ON A VESSEL PREVIOUS
PRICED AT 9.5K.
VESSEL CAN STAY ON THE MOORING IT IS ON IN NEW YORK CITY FOR FREE UNTIL THE END OF AUGUST.
THIS
SMALL SHIP COULD ALSO MAKE A FANTASTIC SUMMER RESIDENCE IN NEW YORK CITY
AT 79TH STREET BOAT BASIN WITH SHOWERS, INTERNET, DINGY DOCK AND
RESTAURANT AND BAR, ONLY 5 MINUTE WALK TO SUBWAY FROM APRIL TO
OCTOBER FOR ONLY $1550 PER SEASON.
CALL
ME TO ASK ANY AND ALL QUESTIONS – I AM VERY HAPPY TO DISCUSS THIS
FINE VESSEL. WILL 970 319-6408
This
very same vessel in the same condition was on the market for 9.5K
which is still a good deal for these rare and sought after vessels in
good condition. The Vessel is READY TO SAIL with an excellent
condition 9.9 HP Yamaha Outboard motor and hydraulic lifting motor
mount and full inventory of sails including two spinnakers and
spinnaker poles. Also has an inboard Yanmar 12hp diesel engine which
turns over but is not currently running. Don’t know what the issue
with it was but will try to find out and post any additional details
in the description. Payment due in full within 24 hours on this
crazy-opportunity no reserve listing. This is your chance to get a
9.5K vessel for a fraction of that. Please read the full description
for all the amazing details on this fantastic coastal cruiser racer
in well maintained ONE-OWNER condition from legendary yacht designer
Peter Norlin & meticulous luxury ship builder Corbin Yachts who built these Albins and who have been building yachts since 1899. More info William 970 319-6408.
Wikipedia
About Albin Yachts
The design
was built by
Albin
Marine
in
Sweden
from 1978 to 1985, with 567 examples completed. The company also
built boats in
Taiwan
.
In 2008 the company was sold to
Bladen
Composites
in the
United
States
, but the company seems to now be out of
business.
[1][3][4][5]Design
The Cumulus
28 is a recreational
keelboat
,
built predominantly of
fiberglass
,
with
teak
wood trim.
It has a
fractional
sloop
rig, a
raked
stem
, a
reverse
transom
, a transom-hung
rudder
controlled by a
tiller
and a fixed fin
keel
.
It displaces 7,055 lb (3,200 kg) and carries 2,812 lb
(1,276 kg) of ballast.
[1][3]The design
has a draft of 5.25 ft (1.60 m) with the standard keel
fitted. The boat is fitted with a Japanese
Yanmar
diesel engine
of 12 hp (9 kW). The fuel tank holds 9.24 U.S. gallons
(35.0 L; 7.69 imp gal) and the fresh water tank has a
capacity of 25 U.S. gallons (95 L; 21 imp gal).
[1][3]The
boat’s
galley
is located on the port side of the cabin at the bottom of the
companionway steps. On the port side is a
stainless
steel
sink and a three-burner alcohol stove. The
head
has a privacy door and is located forward, just aft of the bow
“V”-berth and has a hanging locker. Additional sleeping
space is provided by the dinette settee, which has a folding table.
There is also a quarter berth aft on the starboard side, for a total
sleeping accommodation for five people.
[3]Ventilation
is provided by an
acrylic
forward hatch and two ventilators, while the cabin ports are
fixed.
[3]The
boat has internally-mounted
halyards
and includes jiffy reefing. The cockpit has two self-tailing
genoa
winches, with the genoa blocks track-mounted. The
spinnaker
also uses its own tracks and car. There is a standard 4:1
boom
vang
and 4:1
mainsheet
.
There is an
anchor
well in the bow.
[3]PETER
NORLIN Obituary
The
famous and successful swedish IOR and sailboat designer Peter Norlin
has sailed away at December 13th 2012 in Stockholm, Sweden. He died
from cancer, as other colleagues like Garry Mull and Alan Gurney
did.
Often named “Mr. Scampi”, he designed the famous
IOR Half Ton design “Scampi” which won the Half Ton Cup as
a hattrick in 1969, 1970 and 1971, always helmed by Peter himself.
Such a hattrick has never been seen before and again in the IOR, IMS
or IRC scene.
Other milestones include winning the Quarter Ton Cup
with “Accent” in 1974 and the Three Quarter Ton Cup with
“Regnbagen” in 1979.
Norlin also penned a plethora of
beautiful, fast and safe series production boats like Omega 42,
Norlin 34, Stratus 36, Norlin 37, Avance 36 and Sweden Yachts from 34
to 70 feet:
As a
owner of both a Norlin 37 and a Stratus 36 (series production of
prototype “Regnbagen” by Albin Marin, Sweden) since two
decades, I highly appreciate the power of Peter Norlin´s
designs.
Years ago, Peter was onboard our Norlin 37 “Orca”,
I will always remember him as a wonderful person and great sailor.
Payment
due within 24 hours after close of auction via Cashier’s Check or
Venmo or Counter deposit with managers receipt as proof of payment at
any Wells Fargo Bank Branch. If you are the high bidder at the close
of the auction please call me right after auction closes to discuss
the details of the transaction & tell me what name/ address you
want on the Bill of Sale. Will 970 319-6408 CLEAR OWNERSHIP PAPERS.
WHO
YOU ARE BUYING FROM
We
are serious blue water ocean sailors with thousands of miles and many
years experience offshore and doing coastal cruising. It is our
passion to help other people discover the sailing lifestyle, and
especially the more serious cruising lifestyle.
Sailing
is typically considered a rich man’s sport, and it certainly is if
you pay full price for everything and make the necessary investments
in proper off-shore equipment and a safe “Blue Water Capable”
vessel in turn key condition. However, there are ways to make this
lifestyle possible and affordable to middle class people and retirees
who don’t possess a three million dollar investment portfolio. But
doing that properly and safely and knowing where to find your savings
and where to “not skimp” is the knowledge that can sometimes make
the difference between catastrophe or pleasant exploring once you set
out on your adventure of a lifetime. We are passionate about sharing
our knowledge and helping people discover this amazing
lifestyle…and doing so in a way that keeps them safe, happy and in
the black.
We
already have our keeper boat and don’t need another one, but every
once in a while we discover through our friends and connections at
boatyards, marinas and marine insurance companies a boat that is a
terrific bargain that isn’t getting the love and attention and
exercise that it deserves, and we will try to help find a new home
for it. This is one of those rare boats.
If
you want to call me and discuss your cruising or sailing plans and
dreams and whether or not this boat might actually work to suit your
needs I will be happy to speak with you and give you my honest
opinion about the feasibility of your plans and whether this vessel
might or might not work for you. Feel free to call and chat. William
970 319-6408
ATTENTION: THIS IS A
SERIOUS LISTING FOR A SERIOUS BOAT.  YOUR BID IS A LEGALLY
BINDING CONTRACT TO PURCHASE THIS SAILBOAT THE SAME AS A CONTRACT TO
PURCHASE REAL ESTATE OR A NEW CAR. BY PLACING YOUR BID YOU AGREE TO
THE TERMS OF THE AUCTION AND THE PAYMENT TERMS. PLEASE CONSIDER ALL
OF THIS PRIOR TO CLICKING THE PURCHASE BUTTON.
PLEASE
READ THE ENTIRE TEXT PRIOR TO BIDDING AND MAKE SURE YOU THAT YOU HAVE
AS MUCH INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR PURCHASE AS POSSIBLE. I AM HAPPY TO
ANSWER QUESTIONS ABOUT THE BOAT AND YOU ARE WELCOME TO GO AND SEE IT
IN PERSON PRIOR TO BIDDING IF YOU LIKE. CALL ME IF YOU HAVE ANY
QUESTIONS.
WILLIAM
AT 970 319-6408
PAYMENT
IS DUE IN FULL WITHIN 24 HOURS. SEE PAYMENT TERMS.
CLEAR
OWNERSHIP PAPERS FOR VESSEL. NEW YORK IS A REGISTRATION ONLY STATE IN
WHICH THE REGISTRATION IS THE TITLE AND CAN BE CONVERTED TO A TITLE
IN ANY STATE THAT ISSUES TITLES.
MOVING A BIG SAILBOAT WITH A
BOAT MOVER CAN BE VERY EXPENSIVE. OFTEN $4 OR MORE PER MILE.  I
AM HAPPY TO HELP YOU UNDERSTAND THE OPTIONS IN THAT REGARD IF YOU
WANT TO GIVE ME A CALL. By far the most affordable way to move a
sailboat is by water, so please consider whether your location is
accessible to move the boat by water or whether you will need to pay
the higher cost of having it moved by truck and trailer. Also
consider the time it will take to prepare for a voyage and whether
your sailing skills or those of friends or other sailors you might
find through the yacht crew websites are at the level necessary to
make a safe voyage from the ocean where the boat is located to your
home port.
AND NOW IF YOU AREN’T YET TIRED OF READING A FEW
INSIGHTS TO SHARE ABOUT BUYING BOATS AND CHOOSING THE RIGHT BOAT FOR
CRUISING:
A
little about what we do:
Our
passion is to assist folks who are making a transition from day
sailing or coastal cruising to becoming full-time live-aboard world
cruisers. We also assist new sailors who are just getting into the
sport of sailing by advising them on how to develop their skills and
how to make plans to pursue the dream of cruising and world traveling
full-time.
We
have extensive contacts and resources for finding good world cruising
boats at far below their fair market value, and occasionally we
discover an amazing neglected vessel at a price that we know may
enable a cruising family or a retired couple on fixed income the
ability to pursue the dream of cruising without the sort of means and
savings normally associated with pursuing this lifestyle.
In
those cases, like this boat, we work to try and find a new home for a
good “below market value” boat, with people who will fully
restore the vessel, and hopefully use it for the serious cruising
that the boat was designed for.
There
are many aspects of life where experience really matters, but none so
much as global cruising. When you are planning to take a small boat
across vast oceans and visit foreign ports of call on your own terms
you must truly learn to become Master’s of your Own Destiny. It
doesn’t matter how wealthy you are or how talented you are at
managing large organizations or companies with dozens of staff
people.
When
you are on a boat in the middle of the ocean, the choices you have
made, the choices you will make and your own internal skills and the
undeniable truth of how well or poorly you have planned for your
expedition, are the factors that will determine whether your
experiences become a positive adventure or a frightening (or even
life threatening) catastrophe.
When
you are looking at a boat parked peacefully at a dock or on jack
stands at a boat yard, you will be tempted to judge it based on
whether the lines are nice and whether it is pretty or ugly and
whether it is new or old and well kept or run down.
The
ocean however, operates according to immutable laws of physics. The
ocean does not care whether it sinks a pretty boat or keeps an ugly
one floating. It does not care whether you are a skilled sailor with
dozens or years experience under your shade hat or whether you are an
amateur on your first weekend pleasure cruise. You will be served
exactly the same conditions of wind and waves whether you were born
wealthy or if you were raised in a cave by baboons.
The
only control you have over these situations is knowing when to sail
and when not to sail, and you can prepare yourself so that when the
wrong situation strikes, if it ever does, you are skilled and
prepared to deal with it and have a vessel that is prepared to handle
the same.
For
people who are wanting to go cruising full-time, or who want to go
from being pleasure sailors to competent seamen and seawomen,
choosing the right boat is the first and sometimes ultimately most
important decision of their nautical lives.
Of
course you can always sell or trade a boat and then buy a different
one, but still the choice of each boat will influence the experiences
you have and it will determine in many ways the capabilities or
limitations of what you can or can’t do while you have that boat for
your home—even if it is only home for a few weekends here and
there.
There
are many nuances and subtleties to sailing, as well as to each
individual vessel. A boat that may be just exactly perfect for one
sailor or family of sailors, may be completely the wrong boat to suit
another person’s dreams.
By
nature, boats require a lot of maintenance and upgrades, and if you
are someone who wants all the possible bells and whistles, boating
can be a very expensive occupation.
However,
there are also ways to save a lot of money and still pursue the dream
effectively and safely and create a new floating paradise for
yourself. But each person or each couple’s needs are different.
There
is no such boat as a boat that is not a project boat.
A
cruiser friend I know well (a relatively wealthy man at the time)
purchased a brand new Beneteau 46 for his family to live on for years
and to cruise the world on, the first thing he did to a brand new
half million dollar boat was to spend another $27K on equipment
upgrades, new electronics installations and custom modifications.
No
boat, no matter how shiny and brand new, is exactly right for
everyone’s individual tastes and needs, and no boat comes straight
from the factory completely ready to do anything other than Wednesday
afternoon beer can races.
I
often get asked by people who are shopping for a used boat to go
cruising the world, “Is this boat ready to cross the Atlantic?”
or “Does it need anything before it is ‘Ready to Sail.”
The
very nature of that question is a showcase of their naivety. Even if
the answer were “Yes, the boat is ready.” (which would be
impossible to have any boat ready unless you have spent thousands of
dollars on a cruising chandlery and provisioning service ahead of
time) the greater question is “Are such ignorant sailors who need
to ask such questions ready themselves?”
Even
if they had the absolutely perfect boat, prepared ahead of time by
die-hard professionals to get it ready to cast off the lines and sail
to points distant and exotic, would the sailors know where everything
is at on the boat and how to operate those systems and how not to
break them with ignorant mistakes or how to fix them once broken? And
if they knew all those things, would the boat be equipped with the
necessary repair tools and supplies as part of the process of getting
it ready to sail?
So
all these are big questions, and the only easy answer is that any
sailor must become intimately familiar with their vessel prior to
making long voyages beyond sight of land. The easiest way to become
familiar with a boat so that it is not a stranger but rather a
trusted old friend is to do a lot of weekend coastal cruising with
it, while you work all the bugs out. Also, the more projects and
upgrades you do yourself the more familiar you will be with how they
work, how to maintain them and how to fix them again if anything
every goes wrong. To depend on the expertise of professionals left
behind in a port in a distant country you cleared out of months ago
is only to invite future disaster…and its also much harder on the
wallet.
So
any time you can add to your own skills and knowledge of your own
boat by doing your own work, or hiring a professional to help you do
it yourself, you are preparing yourself for future success as a
cruiser.
Any
boat, even a brand new boat, will have things about it that you want
to change or upgrade or move or install prior to making long voyages.
The
better questions to ask are:

What
is the proper amount of maintenance and upgrades that I will make to
my vessel prior to setting sail?
How
many things need to be changed or fixed before I leave the
continental US?
How
many projects will I work on, as little projects along the way, when
I have a slow day at a boring anchorage and there are no cruiser
parties to attend and no interesting conversations of the side
channels of the VHF.
How
many projects are absolutely vital to get accomplished before I begin
actively using the boat as a full time residence and a floating RV
that can sail to any country with a coastline?”
How
many projects do I want to tackle myself if it means I can save
literally tens of thousands of dollars on the purchase price of a
boat, and how much more ultimate value do I get for my money by
buying a larger or more seaworthy boat with a few bigger projects to
tackle than if I buy a smaller or more flimsy boat that is cleaned up
nicer and has fewer problems to address. (Remember the ultimate
cosmic law of boating – even if you can’t see any problems at all
with a boat, and no projects needing doing, as soon as you own it and
begin to sail it, you will start to find those quirks and bugs) So
don’t fool yourself into believing that you can simply buy a shiny
new boat from a broker at full market value, or even by paying more
than boat blue book value, to avoid ever having to make repairs or
upgrades.
Any
experienced sailor or boating professional other than someone selling
fancy new boats will admit to you that there is no such boat other
than a “project boat.” The only question is “What are the
projects and how much money will I save by doing them myself versus
hiring someone else to complete them?”
Every
boat that I have ever bought or ever sold, which is now many dozens
of them, had varying degrees of things needing to be improved about
it. Even the brand new boats straight from the showroom floor or boat
show sales dock will need bottom painting and new zincs and fuel
cleansing treatments and oil changes and manifold and riser
inspections within a matter or months of casual weekend use.
The
longer any boat sits without the proper level of loving regular
maintenance the faster it will deteriorate, and tiny 15 minute
projects will turn into hour-long projects and hour-long projects
will turn into day-long or week-long projects due to continuing
neglect.
The
quality of the build is also important. A cheap boat will have cheap
boat problems, and it will have serious issues far faster and more
frequently than a very well built boat from an esteemed yacht
designer and builder even if the better boat looks worse initially.
In
many ways you are better off to buy an older and more well regarded
vessel in worse “first impressions” condition than to buy a shiny
and well kept cheaper new boat. In the long run the better boat will
cause far fewer headaches once you have it restored fully and you are
taking care of it yourself, whereas the cheap but glossy boat may
still look new and shiny for years, but begin having serious and
costly problems that cannot be seen even while it still looks great
in Facebook boat pictures.
Boating
is like riding a horse or driving a high performance sports car. You
always have to be involved in the life of your boat whether you use
it frequently or not.
But
this is not a bad thing, because it is part of the pride of
ownership, and the regular maintenance and upkeep and small projects
is what enables you to avoid the big ones or to at least know which
big ones you need to do sooner and which ones can wait till later.

As
you will guess by now, I’m a bit of a philosopher sailor when it
comes to helping folks find just the right boat to serve their needs.
I
am currently writing a book on that very topic which will be called,
“The Seven Questions of Cruising (or) the Seven Questions you
should ask yourself before buying a Boat.” Here is a quick preview
of the questions you should be trying to answer from the introduction
to my new book.

When
you go to buy a boat, especially if it is your first boat, there are
a lot of decisions to be made and hard choices to figure out.
Before
you begin searching for the correct vessel to serve your needs, you
need to first ask yourself, (and your cruising partners/ spouse etc)
some important questions which will help you immensely in the quest
to find the perfect small ship to suit your needs.
Question
# 1- Where do you want to sail to (now and also possibly in the
future)?
#2
– Who might be going with you and/or who might want to visit you
and stay on the boat with you once you get to that exotic foreign
port (if global cruising is your goal) or that incredible weekend
getaway spot (if weekend cruising is your thing).
#3
– How much do you want to spend on this adventure called
boating/sailing/?
Also,
how much “can” you afford to spend if you happen to take a wrong
turn with the adventure and “need” to spend more money to fix a
problem or get yourself or your stalwart side-kick (your boat) out of
trouble?
#4
– How handy are you? (i.e. – Are you someone who naturally takes
pride in your ability to figure it out yourself, or are you the
person who would rather call an “expert” and pay them to solve
whatever problem you are having?
#5
– How much time do you have to save yourself money, because in
sailing, as well as in life in general “time often equals money.”
#6
– Are you a weekend warrior and/or charter sailor, or do you want
to cruise full time?
#7
– Do you care more about Getting There or more about “Being
There” once you have arrived?
Thanks,
William 970 319-6408
Payment
due within 24 hours after close of auction via Venmo or Counter
Deposit with managers receipt as proof of payment at Wells Fargo Bank
or via Bank to Bank Wire Transfer. If you are the high bidder at the
close of the auction please call me right after auction closes to
discuss the details of the transaction & tell me what name/
address you want on the Bill of Sale. CLEAR OWNERSHIP DOCUMENTS.
William
970 319-6408
THERE
IS NO TRAILER FOR THIS VESSEL ALTHOUGH I HAVE ONE NEEDING NEW A BIT OF ATTENTION AND NO TITLE THAT I WOULD SELL SEPARATELY. Call to Enquire about that if interested.
LARGE SELF TAILING PRIMARY WINCHES
READY TO SAIL WITH POSSIBLE EXCEPTION OF BATTERIES.
PLUS SEVERAL ADDITIONAL SECONDARY WINCHES (SEE PHOTOS)
CARBON FIBER SAILS VALUED AT $6500
NEW SYNTHETIC, WATER RESISTANT WOOD FLOOR WAS INSTALLED ABOUT 2 YEARS AGO
MAIN SAIL IN GOOD CONDITION
GENOA #1, #2, #3 IN GOOD CONDITION
2 SPINNAKERS IN GOOD CONDITION
SPINNAKER POLE IN GOOD CONDITION
3  winch handles
1  Locking winch handle
1  Yanmar Tool Kit
1  folding prop for Yanmar
1  small wood outboard motor mount
2  aluminum sail tracks
2  plastic hose vents
1  turning block with cable
Assorted hose clamps and new redundant spare parts
1  Guest battery switch
2  Shaefer blocks
2  tiller extensions
2  extra fenders
2  throw-able life preserver cushions
Winter cover for the boat
Winter cover for the outboard
Battery terminals
Navigation Charting Kit
Large locking winch handle
Fishing Poles and Tackle
2  engine impellers
TOTAL
VALUE OF DECK HARDWARE ALONE  $1,350.00
{NOTE:
 The winter cover original cost $2,000}
******
Standard
Legal Disclaimer – Vessels are sold “As Is” with no
warranty either express or implied. The Company listing this vessel
for sale offers the details of this vessel in good faith but cannot
guarantee or warrant the accuracy of this information nor warrant the
condition of the vessel. A buyer should instruct his agents, or his
surveyors, to investigate such details as the buyer desires
validated. This vessel is offered subject to prior sale, price
change, or withdrawal without notice.
PAYMENT TERMS –
Payment
due within 24 hours after close of auction via Venmo or Cashier’s Check
with managers receipt as proof of payment at any Wells Fargo Bank.
Paypal deposit due immediately after close of the auction. If you are
the high bidder at the close of the auction please call me right after
auction closes to discuss the details of the transaction & tell me
what name/ address you want on the Bill of Sale. Will 970 319-6408 CLEAR OWNERSHIP PAPERS.