matt1
Well-Known Member
What is the price of this new model? Anyone have a price list available?
Garold
about £500k
What is the price of this new model? Anyone have a price list available?
Garold
I like my Hallberg Rassy Rasmus, a revolutionary design ( of its day) that sold in large numbers. She's 44 years young and will cross the Atlantic this year.That's a big claim, do you have data to back that up? Alternative opinions could be: it is perceived to be easy to go long distance cruising but in fact the reality is that it is quite a tough thing to do with considerable risk and that is what frightens people off after they have done a bit; or that it is boring and living in foreign climates is boring. Both these are just comments based on no analysis what so ever.
It is a fact that modern designs are being sailed all over the world quite successfully.
That's a big claim, do you have data to back that up? Alternative opinions could be: it is perceived to be easy to go long distance cruising but in fact the reality is that it is quite a tough thing to do with considerable risk and that is what frightens people off after they have done a bit; or that it is boring and living in foreign climates is boring. Both these are just comments based on no analysis what so ever.
It is a fact that modern designs are being sailed all over the world quite successfully.
about £500k
Just look at the entry lists for the ARC which reflect the fact that people have discovered that you don't need an older style heavy displacement boat for long distance cruising.
The new HR44 is a RR Evoque.
The new HR44 is a RR Evoque. People driving old Series III 109 Landrovers will tut and mutter into their half pint of craft beer, but they were never, and will never be the buyers of new vehicles. So why give a shit what they think.
HR are only interested in people with a minimum of half a million Euro spare cash, and ready and willing to spend on a new boat - and preferably 1-2 million Euro. Most of these people will already have a RR /. Porsche Cayenne, and like modern technology in home, car and boat.
Assuming it was written by a Swede, I'm not going to get pedantic over correct nautical English terminology.
Pete
That might equally be taken to suggest that owners of older style heavy displacement boats don't feel the need to cluster together for protection in the ARC.
The average sized yacht in the Caribbean is approximately 45ft long. If you remove the charter boats that are predominately modern designs the remaining liveaboard boats tend to be older designs. They sprout all the liveaboard additions of self steering, wind generators, solar panels, radar that dont exist on the charter boats. There are plenty of Island Packets, Halberg Rassys and Marlos. Not modern designs and not cheap boats but they are chosen over modern designs presumabley like me as they find them more suited to the cruising we do.
Things like twin rudders have been shown to give better stability at speed, particularly under autopilot with asymmetric kites up. And many owners will appreciate the ability to stow a dinghy in a garage between the rudder stocks.
IP have gone bust, Malo build in penny numbers, Najad have been bust at least twice and no longer make old style boats. HR sales have dropped by 50% - in 2015 their exhibition boat at Southampton was 7 years old because nobody in the UK was buying new ones.
The people you mention as using old style boats (like you) are not the market for new boats. The used boat market is stuffed full of older style boats at a fraction of the price of new ones.
New HR 41 are half a million £s when fully specced. I considered an HR 31 when I bought my new boat in 2015 because the base price was within reach of my budget. However when specced to the level I wanted it was literally twice the price of the boat I bought. This was not the case 10 years ago when the premium might have been around 60%. To try and keep this premium down HR have adopted many of the production techniques of the mass producers, but even then they still have to deal with the fact that their volumes are small and they build boats in the most expensive country in Europe.
Sure some people will buy their ultimate dream boat and have the money to do it, but that number is clearly declining, and they seem to prefer modern boats.
IP have gone bust, Malo build in penny numbers, Najad have been bust at least twice and no longer make old style boats. HR sales have dropped by 50% - in 2015 their exhibition boat at Southampton was 7 years old because nobody in the UK was buying new ones.
But it's undeniable that Hallberg-Rassy have refined the ability to make their boats look absolutely gorgeous, in fact they look so gorgeous that people will pay the premium to own one. I can't think of many other builders who've achieved the same level of appeal - maybe Oyster, Gunfleet, Discovery and Rustler in the UK?
I was invited aboard a newish HR a couple of years ago. Nice enough, if a bit bland, but it was interesting to see what turned up when the the three children aboard started playing hide and seek. My goodness, what a lot of cheap looking plywood lurks under that shiny interior.
Don't forget that Bavaria effectively went bust, lost their then owners the thick end of a billion euros, are now building at less than half capacity and are looking to diversify into, for example, catamarans.
Not that many people would be making a direct choice, but their boats are just so expensive now and difficult to see the added value in relation to the price premium.