steve yates
Well-Known Member
It is a very unfortunate habit that Classic & Mabby boat owers here feel licenced to pour derision, insults and cynicism on the vast majority of yachts manufactured in the past 20 years. Do these same people climb out of their 1970 LandRover in a Tesco car park, walk upto a man loading his shopping and family into a Ford Focus and publically berate the guy for being stupid enough to buy a car not capable of entering the next Paris to Dakar rally.
Nothing changes here, 10 years ago I warned that the aging Brit classic/evergreen designs were vastly overpriced, in effect prices were propped up by a ponzi scheme of irrational sentimentality. The market has since crashed as I predicted.
There are many worthy attributes in these old designs and given an expensive and thorough rebuild they can become very capable sailing vessels once more. However I hate to see new entrants to yachting, who have read the dated writtings of the Hiscocks and Pardys, suckered into the ponzi scheme of Brit Mab ownership. A yacht is just a collection of manufactured components most of which are knackered after 30 years, Jerremy Rogers knows this which is why he charges £50k to remanufacture a CO32.
Couple of things come to mind Jonjo,
It appears to me, a newcomer, that it's more of a defensiveness on your part and that you are imagining your modern boats being slated. I haven't seen that on this thread. The guy simply asked for ideas, based on his own set of preferences, I'm not sure how that's such a problem?
Hiscocks and pardey's, well the knowledge may be old, but it is vast! And I don't see how genuine knowledge goes out of date. What worked for them then will still work now in terms of design and hull form surely?
Yes there are more modern and new ideas on these things now, they may, or they may not, be better? But it certainly does not negate what did work.
The cynic in me thinks that it is perfectly possible that older designs were driven by seaworthiness, and modern designs by costs, margins and sales features to attract families and charter fleets.Of course they float, and may well fly, and can cross oceans. But so can bathtubs. If I was looking at long term passages, my u.timate criteria would be a boat I felt gave me best chances of surviving a storm, period.
Oh and if cars were made from grp, a lot of old designs would still be in use and selling
I used to work on older cruise ships in the late eighties early nineties, they were built in the thirties, and in one we rode out a hurricane for three days. Never in a million years would one of her much bigger, vastly more comfortable and much posher modern contemporaries have stayed upright, we would all be dead.
For a holiday, I would choose the latter, if working on one, the former.
And lastly, there is the point of aesthetics. I was shooting a wedding on Windermere and the low wood marina had about 20 boats all lined up. All I could read was jeanneau, benneteau, Bavaria, a huge line of all white boats all looking extremely similar to my untrained eye. I thought they looked boring as ****.
Soulless.
Now that, you understand is just a purely personal reaction, and not a slight on their owners, who probably love their boats and have a ton of fun on them. You would laugh your socks off at my ugly wee boat, BUT, these personal preferences are intrinsic to owning a boat. And the OP stated his, so why bother slating him for it?
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