I bought my 2006 M at Christmas 2005 in Marina Del Rey and immediately slipped it there for 2 1/2 years, where I sailed it 200+ times a year until I moved to Mexico in June 2008 and took the boat with me. In Mexico it suffered some hull damage (no fault of the boat), which has not yet been fixed - - - the reason being I moved to Las Vegas, but dislike Lake Mead and therefore have no other reasonable place to sail the Mac, so I just haven't bothered to get it repaired as yet. I also dislike trailering (well, not the trailering, the unrigging and rerigging). Therefore, I am now CONSIDERING selling the boat, but it has nothing to do with the boat - - - - it has to do with my current location, which I feel is not sail friendly and Lake Mead has other problems. I expect to be in Las Vegas for the rest of my life - - - and if that's the case - - - I may just give up sailing, except for renting a sailboat when I vacation somewhere else (which kind of appeals to me - - - I would get to try out other larger sailboats).
In answer to Ray's question, I think that if a Mac is well maintained, it CAN last a long time (that's not me - - - I am a user, not a maintainer). I LEARNED to sail on my Mac, and it is great for that purpose. Most people, I think, will do mods etc. on their Macs and tend to keep them a long time - - - it is, generally speaking, a middle class boat, priced well below the next steps upward. I didn't buy mine because of the price - - - I bought mine to get excercise and work on my balance (I had just suffered a stroke 4 months before I bought it and I thought the Mac would either kill me or cure me and it cured me).
Regardless of what I decide to do with my Mac, and I don't believe mine is a NORMAL case, I know I will always look back upon the time with my Mac very fondly. Yes, one does compromise on both sailing and motoring with this boat - - - but there is
NOTHING WRONG with this boat!! It does what it is supposed to do!
Rick
Edited for spelling as usual.