ylop
Well-Known Member
Here:Sorry not good with words where did I say deprioritize or words to that effect .
Yacht designers should be made to work on their clever ideas from my ,perspective, running the boat and its maintenance should be addressed before stuffing in an extra berth or whatever additional feature to sell the boat or non essential gismo
Naval architects have a client - delivering what the client needs is their job. Guiding them to things they might need that they didn't know about could be the difference between a good one and a bad one. Adding engineering cost without a financial return for features the buyer hasn't requested and likely doesn't care about is unlikely to be good business sense - if you push up either the design or production cost, or sacrifice desirable features, you are likely to sell fewer boats. Of course, some builders really do take pride in their very creative designs and where the lifetime engineering really is at front of mind, Sirius are an obvious example, but they cost alot more and their buyers are likely planning to hang on to them much longer than your typical production boat.Your last sentence doesn’t reflect well on the integrity of the naval architect