Build quality modern yachts

Snobbery is a fact of life, you either care about it or you don't ...

So far on this thread, we've established that true yachts need to be blue-water capable, anything else is just built for the charter market or coastal cruising and is totally unsuitable for anything else. I don't have a real yacht because I have a Bavaria 36 which fails most of the true-yacht criteria listed below ;)

A real yacht needs to meet the following criteria:

Massive amounts of tankage - I think 900 litres of water and around 500 litres of diesel is the minimum - no water maker because it is the work of the devil - power hungry and may fail.
A skeg hung rudder is a must (the bigger and tougher the skeg the better)
The fiberglass lay-up must be more than an inch thick - everywhere - the thicker and heavier the lay-up, the better - no foam sandwich is allowed anywhere - or indeed any internal grid structure to strengthen the hull - the strength needs to come from the thickness of the laminate.
No modern materials are allowed for the internal construction - all woodwork needs to be solid teak or something equally as nice, teak veneer on a piece of marine ply might be acceptable, but anything new-fangled like HPL or Resopal - its a form of formica apparently and that belongs in caravans.
The boat needs to weigh over 12 tons with the ballast in an encapsulated keel - bolt on keels are not to be found on real yachts - the heavier the better, weight is more important than buoyancy because weight gives the boat a more sea-kindly motion - your yacht needs to sit "in" the water, not "on" it.
High freeboard is a no-no because it catches the wind and the boat will sail round its anchor and you will need a step to get from a typical UK floating pontoon onto the boat.
It's not allowed to have a large cockpit or too much room below because having space around you when sailing is dangerous - you need to be within a foot of a grab rail or hand-hold at all times and that is best achieved by reducing the interior volume.
You also need to be physically wedged into the cockpit at all times when outside - large cockpits are dangerous.
Reefing needs to be done at the mast with granny bars for safety, none of these new-fangled roller furling main sails operated from the cockpit - they just jam and you have too many ropes in the cockpit - and as you need to go forward to set up a stay sail, you might as well reef at the mast too.
Saildrives are not to be found on real yachts, they only exist to make he job of the boat builder easier, and their seal needs replacing every 7 years at massive expense.
It needs to have true sea berths with lee-boards
... and finally, your first real yacht needs to be a small one - it's wrong to jump straight in with something around 40 ft.

Once you have cut your teeth on a small proper yacht, you then qualify to order a Swan, Halberg Rassey, Najad, Sweden Yachts or Malo ... are Malo still in business?

I think there might have been a requirement for it to be built before 1990 too but I'm not sure.

I think that sums it up. ????

Have I forgotten anything?
 
Your close to a golden globe eligible yacht with that list ?
A transom hung rudder would surely be more desirable than a skeg hung ?
 
Is the white boat what customers really want or what the manufacturers tell you you want?
Ignoring any price difference which boat would you rather own ?
 

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Is the white boat what customers really want or what the manufacturers tell you you want?
Ignoring any price difference which boat would you rather own ?
Of those two, the blue boat for sure. But there are prettier, better performing versions of AWB than the white one.
 
Sadly the price difference often plays a part - there a vast difference in price between a new Rustler 42 say and something from the Hanse family of whichever marque you chose apart fro mperhaps a deck saloon you moody.
 
You forgot the nice well balanced (pinched in IOR influenced) stern like my Sadler 32 has.

Also, maybe in more of a minority here, no shore power, oil cabin and riding lights, no fridge or shower.

For all that, we bought our boat new, like that, and entirely understand why people don't buy 20 or more year old boats. We didn't and it wasn't difficult to see why an 80s boat was more attractive than a 60s one... as long as we avoided the flimsily built French boats that were coming in then.

We also broke the fashion then to have a twenty something starter boat, our first experiences were with 30 something boats, and at the time we could afford one, so that's what we got.

But, did people then with 60s boats think the 80s ones were rubbish? I don't think so, apart from the 80s French boats.

Those French boats were the original AWBs I suppose.
 
Was the first awb that came up in Google. Sorry for my choice.
Maybe if I say traditional or new styling ?
 
You forgot the nice well balanced (pinched in IOR influenced) stern like my Sadler 32 has.

Also, maybe in more of a minority here, no shore power, oil cabin and riding lights, no fridge or shower.

For all that, we bought our boat new, like that, and entirely understand why people don't buy 20 or more year old boats. We didn't and it wasn't difficult to see why an 80s boat was more attractive than a 60s one... as long as we avoided the flimsily built French boats that were coming in then.

We also broke the fashion then to have a twenty something starter boat, our first experiences were with 30 something boats, and at the time we could afford one, so that's what we got.

But, did people then with 60s boats think the 80s ones were rubbish? I don't think so, apart from the 80s French boats.

Those French boats were the original AWBs I suppose.

My dad had a boat from 1968 and 1972 in the mid to late 80s .... the Moodys of the time were always derided by him and his mates as floating caravans ... nothing changes.

Everyone lusts after the quality brands but can't afford them, those that instead choose to buy modern designs from the volume manufacturers are derided for buying floating caravans while the real sailors sit in the pub putting the world to rights, exchanging stories of sailing adversity ... if the truth be told, they're in the pub because it is warm, dry and welcoming with comfortable seating - in stark contrast to their boats. ???
 
I dont really care - new or old designs. Each have there advantages. I do care about the build quality and I do think old boats were built badly as well as new boats. Just give me a well built yacht, sound and solid and all the rest will be fine.
 
Yes, we looked at Moodys, but were unimpressed. The thing that really grated was that the interior didn't match the the exterior, bulkheads were fitted right across windows, like a cheaply converted house for multiple occupation. Also we thought the fashion for bijou cabins instead of quarter berths was claustrophobic, and there weren't enough handholds down below either.

Irritatingly, even the early Primrose ones had a good turn of speed.
 
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