Another welcome to the forum ☹
You’re asking some great questions and the responses clearly reflect the boating history of the the responder.
Great to hear that Suhaili was out on the water. Walked past her many times whilst berthed at Gosport. And even better if RKJ was aboard.Funnily enough, Sir RKJ was leaving Portsmouth harbour in Suhaili on Thursday evening as I was entering the small boat channel.
Not many electrical systems could survive full immersion in sea water!I always thought a truly practical boat is one that could be filled with seawater, drained, rinsed and dried off, and sailed again without issue nor evidence. Like a dinghy I suppose.
There are instances I have seen of deliberately sinking smaller boats in the path of Big Bad Hurricanes , then raising them with air bags and compressed air, putting the mast back up, sails , battery, outboard and cushions back on , and hey ho, off for a day sail whilst hapless others are starting to sort out beached wrecks, destroyed marina “pile ups”, looted hulks , enviro mess and insurance wrangles..
In a very small way, I have always been a fan of epoxy sealing joinery before installing it in my own boat. In theory -ha ha- it will survive deck leaks or a wave, that might otherwise wick into end grain of any solid timber or man made fibre boards /ply...
As somebody who owns and sails a Trintella 44, I appreciate the build quality and strength for the kind of sailing we do. At 44ft we have all the space we need for a sailing couple living onboard almost full time for the last six years. The shape of the hull and the deep fin keel, 7’2”, gives great performance. The large fully equipped galley rivals anything in a modern AWB. The flush decks give great space for lounging around or rigging up the paddleboard or sailing dinghy.The design of AWBs is brilliant, it's just that the designers have different priorities.
If you have £450,000 to spend on a yacht then you can choose between Bavaria's current 50' yacht or Hallberg-Rassy's new 40'er - the evidence is that most punters choose the extra 10'.
This is why AWBs dominate the market and why the likes of Camper & Nicholson went bust - most buyers are motivated by the glossy brochures, showing the mediterranean yachting lifestyle, the wife in her one-piece on the swimming platform with the kids. Before buying my secondhand boat I looked at a number of others, but the 1970's Nich 39 and 1980's Trintella 38 stood out for build quality, and I marvelled at little details - most people are not prepared to spend 20% extra for their boat to outlast them.
I've written before about my experiences last year sailing thousands of miles on 15-year-old Beneteaus and Jeanneaus - bits were falling off in my hand! But a 10-year-old car is considered a "banger", so why should boats be any different? If you buy a brand new AWB then you may well trade it in after 10 years, and I'd expect no problems,
Not everybody wants a modern design. The build of modern boats benefits from computer design packages that didint exists 20 years ago. Materials can be paired down to the minimum that is sufficient to do the job required of it in 99% of circumstances. Hull thickness, deck thickness, rigging diameter, keel weight and therefore reinforcement around the keel structure is all minimised by good design. This makes the boats more economical to build. The interiors can be assembled in a factory and slotted in before the deck goes on. Great for speeding up production and nothing wrong with that. The builder sells boats and the owner gets a ice cheap boat.Generally speaking, the build quality of modern boats is excellent. Their designs reflect the demands of the market place where customers want a boat where there is space for the occupants of the boat to be comfortable either above or below deck. That means a reasonably open layout below and a cockpit that is deep enough and big enough to provide comfortable and safe seating. Customers want to be able to control the boat from the cockpit, so lines will be led aft and in mast furling predominates in new builds and so on.
My Greece based boat is a 20 year old Bavaria: build quality is excellent. In many ways it’s better than the quality of my 51 year old Hurley, where there are weird inconsistencies in the build. For example, most of the boat was clearly built by a man with a bucket of resin and a slap a bit more on attitude. However, the cockpit locker lid is paper thin in places to the extent that I’ve used a piece of 12mm ply to reinforce it. I think what I’m trying to say is that the quality control systems in most modern boat manufacturing is excellent. You may not like the designs, appreciate the more open layouts and so on but the actual build quality is generally fine. And they sail well. You simply have to remember that you reef early and that standing the boat on its ear won’t make it go faster.
Not everybody wants a modern design.
My last long distance/trade wind sail
I have owned two catamarans and sailed one of them across the Atlantic and back. You are correct that catamarans are great for trade wind sailing. They are a poor choice for the West to East trip back across the pond which is why you see them out numbered by 10 to 1 on the return leg. The vast majority do the trip back on a ship.Even fewer want a 40 year old boat.
Modern AWB are the product of people wanting to buy them. For the vast majority that means weekends and summer holiday cruising.
Not everyone wants to sail the world or liveaboard their boats so that’s a different market.
I’ve always been a monohull fan but, as I have an open mind, I can see the many advantages that a cat has for trade wind sailing and living aboard. My last long distance/trade wind sail was in a cat. This was with liveaboarders moving their boat to a new region. When we arrived (ahead of several monohulls that departed at about the same time), I saw mostly cats at anchor, many AWB but none 40 or so year old design, other than those clearly now lying abandoned.