$49,000
Bristol, Rhode Island
Year
1985
Make
LM
Model
32
Category
Pilothouse Boats
Length
32'
Posted Over 1 Month
1985 LM 32 This 1985 LM 32 is located in Rhode Island
She is a magnificent example of a canoe stern pilothouse sailboat, which typically provides excellent sea keeping ability.
She comes equipped with radar, GPS, auto helm, and has a white bimini top over the cockpit as well as a blue mooring cover.
Very comfortable below she's a great example of Danish boat building. The LM in this case stands for Lunderskov Møbelfabrik. (I know- easy for me to say). Let's just stick with LM.
Powered by a Yanmar diesel with only 261 hours on it.
All LM boats came with a very complete list of standard equipment, including lifelines, pulpits, speedometer, depthsounder, boarding ladders, anchor and rode, fenders, fire extinguishers, and even dishes and cutlery.
She does have a crack in the forward hatch that has been repaired so there's no leakage, but you might want to consider getting it replaced.The LM32
The 32 shares all the obvious characteristics of the LM line—particularly the distinctive canoe stern and pilothouse. In most respects, it is simply a larger version of the smaller models. The boat is 32 feet in length and has a 27-foot, 10-inch waterline; its beam is 10 feet 8 inches, and it draws 4 feet, 11 inches. The bilge keel models (called twin-keel in some brochures) draw 4 feet, 1 inch. Displacement is 12,000 pounds, with 4,400 pounds of ballast.Accommodations
The LM32’s cockpit is sizable considering that canoe-stern boats usually have shortened cockpits. There are bench seats on each side of the cockpit, and a large fold-out table easily can seat six. The boat has a white canvas bimini that covers the cockpit.
There are lockers under each of the bench seats—propane tanks on the port side—and a huge locker under the cockpit sole.
At the top of the rudder-stock is an attachment spot for the removable tiller, which can be used if you want to sail from the cockpit rather than from the pilothouse. The wheel steering in the pilothouse has a mechanical disconnect so the tiller moves freely.
At the forward end of the bench seats on each side are the halyard and reefing lines, which run inside a channel on the side of the pilothouse and terminate in cam cleats in front of stainless winches.
The mainsheet has a single cam-cleat attachment point at the back edge of the pilothouse, and the sheet hangs down into the cockpit.
At the front of the cockpit, double sliding doors open up to the pilothouse. On the starboard side is the steering station with a raised captain’s seat and a second fold-up seat that slides out so two people can share the helm. A wood steering wheel is immediately ahead, and engine controls, the electrical panel, and sailing instruments are directly in front of the helmsman.
The chart table is immediately ahead of the wheel. This setup is good for laying down a chart so the helmsman can see it.