doug748
Well-Known Member
one example that nobody will dispute: Contessa 32.
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I dispute it.
one example that nobody will dispute: Contessa 32.
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I dispute it.
Until you try it, simply google "contessa 32" + "wet boat" and see how many hits you get.
I don't think that's a fair representation of the terms of the debate. The disagreement is not "which design is best". People aren't stupid, everyone is well aware that every design is a compromise. The disagreement is whether or not one design (the design that's been overwhelmingly most common for 20 years or more) is actually structually dangerous.
Brought on by the long keel thread, it's always puzzled me why there are so many luddites in yachting.Car enthusiasts may like an old classic car but rarely in my experience do they believe the old car is better than the cars made today. Same thing applies in motorbikes, and indeed in every other hobby I can think of bar antique collection.
Yet a fair proportion of sailors seem to believe stongly that old long keel narrow gutted heavy old gaff rigged boats are way better than what is made these days. Single handed sailors whizz round the world in high tech tea trays yet many yotties believe that anything more modern than the mid 50s is unsafe new fangled rubbish. And yet most of them do no more than an occasional cross channel jaunt.
OK I'm exagerrating a bit but you get the idea. Why is it that sailing has so many luddites?
I don't think dangerous comes into it at all. So far the discussion has mostly revolved around performance and comfort, with a bit about relative maintenance thrown in. No one is saying that AWB's are dangerous and MAB's are safe or vice versa.
>Maybe, the ideal is a modern (water proof and efficient) boat to a traditional design that is prooven to perform, with a few extra luxuries.
Ah, Spirit yachts. They are truly pretty and truly expensive.
Also, you are right, houses are more relevant to yachts than road transport.
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Show me where I can buy a proven ocean going design brand new for under £20k and I will agree with you . . .
- W
Luddites were workers who deliberately smashed up new machinery in order to try to preserve their old jobs. What is the connection with a preference for old boats?
Not even the maddest old gaffer fan believes that its preservation will be aided by destroying a plastic boat.
I'm pretty sure this thread was born out of the Bav thread:
http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?t=236139
Either way it's folly to say that one type is safer than the other as there are deathtraps in both camps.
At just 20k for an "Ocean going boat" you are into old banger territory like it or not. But you wouldnt try to convince yourself that an old Austin Ambassador is better than a new BMW so why do the same with boats? The Ambassador is simply what you can afford not whats best.
I would say that in any price range you will always get a better boat by buying a good older design second-hand and refitting it to your own specifications.
- W
..... Think it is also true that heavy expenditure on upgrading an old boat adds little to its value. £10k spent on a £20k boat is unlikely to add more than £2-3k to sale value.
two modern designs being overwhelmed by conditions.