Brent Swain
N/A
Completely agree, similar to what I have been saying through this thread.
Problem for our steel enthusiast is reality. Unless you can have a new steel boat built and wait while the process is carried out, build one yourself or purchase a used one, you wont find one as easily as in other materials.
GRP, Aluminium, timber, all readily available.
The distinct advantages which BS implies re steel, I-and most others interested-can agree with.
But to suggest that ALL GRP boats are crap and not fit for purpose other than sitting in Marina's is so wrong it has been corrected by many experienced sailors and owners.
The unfortunate part is that BS will not accept facts that dont meet his extremely narrow outlook.
One thing I will say, and I suspect I will not be contradicted, is that if one of the major boatbuilders built and sold Steel yachts in large numbers, they would need a bloody big warranty department!
I have just used Oxalic Acid to-as they say in Belfast- take the bad look off the portlight areas of my steel boat. Temporary fix, all the vertical staining has gone, paint not too bad, but the cut edge where the portlights were cut is badly corroded. The builder should have put the perspex on the outside, so not leaving a trap for seawater to lurk.
Oh well-off we go again, lots of work on the horizon..............................
I once installed a stainless opening port in the front of a wheelhouse on one of my 36 footers ,by removing the glass and welding the stainless frame corner to corner to the steel, leaving everything open to the paint brush and epoxy, with no hidden spaces between surfaces for rust to start.
As you so accurately point out, doing things properly, based on decades of steel boat ownership and maintenance, can drastically cut the maintenance on a steel boat, and the liabilities. I always advocate bolting the perspex on the outside, which would have probably eliminated your problem, as you pointed out . Not doing so is the builders fault, not the fault of the material.
It was giving it the "yottie look" ,over more practical priorities, based on the nature of the material ,which causes so many similar maintenance problems.
Yes , plastic is good material for most part time coastal cruising, just not as good as steel for full time, year round cruising as a way of life.
No it is no where near as safe and worry free as steel, when sailing at hull speed on a dark ,moonless night.
I met a guy this past summer, who has owned two steel boats, cruised extensively, and now has a plastic boat. He said, after experiencing the feeling of safety and security of steel, ( a feeling few cruisers have ever exprienced), he feels like he is now sailing in a fragile eggshell.
