Neeves
Well-known member
Looking a little sorry for herself nowadays. Hull not in the greatest condition (all imo).
Many yachts built in 1949 would have been scrapped by now and other yachts of the same vintage would look sad and tired, even people of that vintage look sad and tired. . 70 year old Yachts (and people) need some care and maintenance which is often expensive (health) insurance (or the NHS/Medicare) covers it for people, insurance for yachts does not cover maintenance.
Reading the posts - if you are a gifted amateur you can maintain and update an old, glass or wooden, yachts with average skills. Not so an aluminium yacht which I suspect needs deep pockets and specific and scarce skills to maintain.
Reverting to Geem's original post - aluminium does appear to be the material of choice for an expedition yacht, though many 'non-expedition' yachts have successfully completed the NW Passage, However unless you are going to higher latitudes, where ice might be a factor, other construction methods appear perfectly adequate, arguably better and cheaper than aluminium. Unless you are going to sail in ice - there are better materials than aluminium.
No-one on this thread has offered an advantage to using aluminium over the current cross section of alternative materials.
I do note Kukri's post where he compares the weight of identical designs in aluminium and fibreglass, where aluminium is astonishingly lighter, but I suspect if you built a Nicholson 55 now it could be lighter than one of the originals.
However it does raise the question to me - how do they maintain all the aluminium ferries, coastal patrol craft etc that are built from aluminium? Or do aluminium vessels become a liability when they are 20 years old (choose your own date), or older - unless you have very deep pockets (a characteristic of the owners of aluminium coastal patrol craft).
I have also noted the wear or corrosion issues mentioned by Bejansailor - which are 'simply' factors of maintenance and attention to detail. Sailing for us is meant to be a pleasure, not a constant round of minor, or major, maintenance issues (that will be catastrophic unless attended to quickly).
I hate to mention it - but how do they manage anchor lockers on aluminium vessels, lots of wiring (windlass), lots of dissimilar metals, windlass, steel chain (different alloys), stainless, anaerobic muds - and lots of constant salt water. The stainless nuts and bolts on an assembled Fortress anchor corrode into an immovable lump - unless protected with Duralac (no mention of this on the Fortress instructions).
I'll stick with a 'resin based' construction techniques, (Duralac and keep away from ice) - pending a more positive background to aluminium.
Jonathan
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