The biggest competition for a New fish is... a quality used fish. Kinda the same thing as Harleys. If it looks and sails the same, why spend more? They last a very long time with any kind of care at all.
Which suggests to me a question; is there an official appraisal/rating system for used Sunfish, kind of like the quality rating systems for comic books and such?? Or the concours ratings on classic restored cars? I've never heard of one.
Seems like it would be pretty subjective, but an objective format might be based on some easy criteria like:
Age of the hull
Hull weight over factory spec.
Number of non-factory-original holes made in it.
OEM parts percentage regarding the rigging, rudder, daggerboard.
Condition of mast and spars from like-new to "some scuffs" to "looks ok? from the dockside".? Any bends or kinks would take points off.
Quality of the gelcoat in terms of cracks, scratches, goug es, breaks: none, minor spiderwebs, major cracks, repaired and refinished damage.
overall finish: Original, refinished, repainted.
A points system associated with each category gives you an overall number that could roughly describe the boat's value relative to factory-new.? But it also might give you a? checklist, a way to assess the value of a used boat in relative dollars to fix it up, compared to the price of a brand new boat.? A 100-dollar boat is a great value, ...unless you need to spend 2-300 dollars (and shipping) on a new mast and spars, 100 for a new sail,? 80-100 for a new block, 100 for cam cleats, 80 for ropes and lines, 100 for a daggerboard or a rudder,? 80-150 for a tiller or a tiller extension, 50-150 on fiberglass and refinishing supplies... see where I'm going with this?? I got a used boat for basically 20 bucks.? I've got probably 300, spent in little batches, into it now, to restore it. It's a ctually worth more, parted-out, than at the dock, ready to sail...
... or you could just jump in the damn thing and go sail:-) We don't do this for money, we do it for love. But money helps make it all happen.