That is surprising Westerly named one of their Fulmar school boats Concerto considering it knew another Fulmar already had been named Concerto.In which case, based on the build date and that the mainsheet started aft, I would say that yours is not an ex Sea School boat. Just happens to be sharing a common name.
What a mess. Different models all over the place.If men were working on them there is no decent access, Just step ladders. If i was building those I would have a raised floor round each one so the operatives could just walk on & off at deck level.
At the bottom of that attachment in #21 ( sorry attachment did not copy)it says that one man is assigned a yacht to himself.Here is a picture from their brochure showing the LM production line
Went skint , did he?The cap'n tried that new fangled system when he started building boats, but when the chap who fitted the Fastnet lamps fell sick there followed a three month delay in delivery ;0)
That is surprising Westerly named one of their Fulmar school boats Concerto considering it knew another Fulmar already had been named Concerto.
What a mess. Different models all over the place.If men were working on them there is no decent access, Just step ladders. If i was building those I would have a raised floor round each one so the operatives could just walk on & off at deck level.
If they were finished & waiting delivery then there was too much stock & they were badly stored, I doubt that they were finished,The one in the front certainly is not.. if one wanted to get a boat out. How do you get a trailer in there to move one? Reeks of an inefficient assembly process. Why are they stuck in a random manner like that? Why not have all the Centaurs together & Fulmars together etc so men working on them have the bits for each boat together rather than all over the place at each end of the factory.
Negative-- Not really. Just pointing out weaknesses. Is that wrong, or are whistleblowers banned on the forum?You are negative, if you look all the boats are finished, boats were built differently and they had production constraints. They may not have had the flowline production of Sealine, they still managed to make over 2,400 Centaur's for instance, and were a major exporter.
Brian
I have a Fulmar FR38 named Concerto that was launched in 1980. I know that my Concerto was based in the Solent until 1992. The original Builders Certificate shows that Cyril Lyon and Brian Willis were the co-owners. In 1982 Brian Willis sold his share to John Russell. Were they part of the Westerly Sailing School? She had a red painted style line and red painted transom, which I believe was original. Concerto was then sold to Mr Davies in 1990 and again in 1992 to Mr T Wicken and she then moved to the Medway.
I used to own a Westerly Pentland ketch and still have a soft spot for Westerly yachts however life moves on and I now have an LM 28 motorsailer.
Here is a picture from their brochure showing the LM production line
At the bottom of that attachment in #21 ( sorry attachment did not copy)it says that one man is assigned a yacht to himself.
Does that not sound another inefficient way to build a boat? Would it not be better to have something like ( this is off the cuff example for now) a team to do the wiring looms, a team to do engines & pipe work & seacocks etc. A team to drop in the carcass & bulkheads. A team to put the deck on. A man to point the mastic. A man to do head linnings. A man for deck gear & so on. Then each team gets good at their job, can be timed to do it & bonused accordingly. Teams can be sized to suit the construction phases
Surely that is how one would go about building a construction line. One bloke doing bits & pieces from start to finish is never going to be economical. I found that out in my joinery works years ago.
I read that as meaning that one person has the responsibility for the fit out of each boat, not that they did everything by themselves alone. If so, perhaps that's part of the reason why LM had such a good reputation for quality of build.
Giving people control, discretion and responsibility is generally more motivating than the time targets and bonuses you mention.
As for being more efficient, as far as I am aware LM never went under, unlike a lot of the other boat manufacturers one could mention. I believe it was still under the original ownership as it gradually shifted from boat building to concentrate on manufacturing wind turbine blades (as it had decades earlier gradually shifted from furniture making to trailers, caravans, etc., then to boat building). After it had given up boat building altogether it was sold on to international financiers, and is now (or was recently) the biggest manufacturer of wind turbine blades in the world.
Our ketch was initially called Eric then Tolivar, it was built in 1979. We sold it in 1998 to a chap in Isle of Wight.Just noticed you are in Scotland ... the ketch wasn't named "Penny Lane" was it? - million to one shot as there must have been loads built ... it was one I saw a lot as a kid and always admired.
The question is, do they assign one man to each turbine blade?
There was a Penny Lane westerly ketch I knew in Scotland which was a Westerly Conway But come to think of it, the person who owned that boat had a succession of westerly’s named Penny Lane, so an earlier one could have been a PentlandJust noticed you are in Scotland ... the ketch wasn't named "Penny Lane" was it? - million to one shot as there must have been loads built ... it was one I saw a lot as a kid and always admired.
There was a Penny Lane westerly ketch I knew in Scotland which was a Westerly Conway But come to think of it, the person who owned that boat had a succession of westerly’s named Penny Lane, so an earlier one could have been a Pentland
That would figure, the boat I knew was owned by someone from Campbeltown (actually two brothers) who owned West Coast Motors, the bus companyProbably the same guy, used to see it around the Clyde and I think it went through the Crinan or round the Mull and ventured further up the West Coast ... don't know why but I always thought it came from Campbeltown. I was in primary school at the time, but it looked like a bigger version of our friends Centaur - a proper little ship in those days.
You don't remember a big fugly green motor boat from Inverkip called "Minty" do you? ? ? ?