Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Market forces always work. If punters no likey then company go busty?Just seen this vid on YouTube and was struck by how little I like the boat :
What on earth do designers think they're doing to create such monstrosities ?
Boo2
What has that got to do with a discussion on the design of modern boats? Beneteau has built a successful business through research and innovation. They now employ 8200 people in France, US, Poland, Italy and China.
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Market forces always work. If punters no likey then company go busty?
Spent a wet weekend in one,remarkably spacious!
If you'd ever sailed an 1890s gaff cutter ( I have briefly) you'd not object to much more beam, a lot less water in your face and less tendency to heel to 45 degrees. For racing beamy flat boats simply win. Without water ballast and/or multiple gorillas on the rail a more moderate boat is better. But the market and slowly creeping alterations of what "looks good" has brought us to what Ben/Jen/Bav are building today.
Apart from racing, cruising versions of modern designs have good accommodation, sail well and neraly upright in light to moderate winds (when most people want to be sailing), and will get from A to B in strong winds if they have to, though it may be a quite unpleasant experience.
I have a modernish 35 ft cruising Jeanneau - but try as I might I can't work out how to fit in the very civilised Jeanneau accommodation into a 1970s She 36 hull, which is in almost every other respect a greatly superior and much better looking sailing yacht with similar length. But then I'm ancient. If you grew up with racing modern boats the She (the nicest handling boat I've ever sailed) would look an strange ugly pointy-ended antique, nearly as much so as an 1890 racing gaffer.
Beautiful clean lines with slick deck and smart interior; looks fast and I am sure structurally is well designed. What's not to like about this gorgeous yacht? beats my Moody hands down.
I would not have thought that there would be a lot of demand in the charter market for that Bene First - it looks likely to be fast, but accomodation is very basic.I would guess the major market for this boat is not the leisure owner/sailor, but the large charter fleet operators in the Med. (and, maybe the Carib?). I would imagine there are lot of selling points for their typical charter.
I would not have thought that there would be a lot of demand in the charter market for that Bene First - it looks likely to be fast, but accomodation is very basic.
Why do i always end up arguing with you ??? We would have a heyday in the club bar!!!I tend not to believe manufacturers build what people want ... I trend to the idea they build what they THINK and some spotty consultant says people want.