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This one in Seattle'ish looks interesting....BB10 meter.
In Response To:
New boats have always been expensive. Will you buy a new Chuck Paine 14?
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http://seattle.craigslist.org/see/boa/4258641102.html
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Wood is the future of boatbuilding?
If you want a one-off cold molded is a good way to go...
Cold molding is for sure labor intensive. I've built a 35 footer
Good points, both. RM has done quite a bit of cold molding,
Well, for Rich Folks, anyway... (grin)
In the new sailboat-50' market, I think custom is gaining appeal.
Well, perhaps not... But I'd still have to hit the lottery to have Rockport Marine build me a custom 50-footer (grin)
New boats have always been expensive. Will you buy a new Chuck Paine 14?
Nah, for that kind of $/foot, I'd settle for nothing short of "A New Genre of Yachting"... (grin)
This one in Seattle'ish looks interesting....BB10 meter.
"But unlike more design constrained all glass boats.." ??
That tooling, in expense and design, is the constraint.
But that is true of any one-off construction - including GRP.
My design constraint comparison was for production vs custom.
Ok, but the GRP v Wood tradeoffs are orthogonal to the custom/production tradeoffs.
I've never understood the concept of going to sea in a boat that marine life considers dinner...
Ah yes, but then our houses are mostly made of what some people consider fuel!
Putting aside the debate above
But then...
Take it from me, a custom boat is not an investment...
Could be. I think design will trump material in a boats resale value and longevity.
if money were no object,
Loves those. They've taken contemporary performance in classic styling to a different level.
Then they bolt the keel on.
Putting a keel on the first time can be "interesting"
A lot more critical than tightening lug bolts on a auto tire ;^)))
I helped a friend put a recast keel back on a Sabre 36 while he was helping me fiberglass my new rudder.
Last Summer I helped put a fin keel on a new build
When we put the keel on mine, we fitted it twice..
Clearly a critical joint that gets worked.
The problem with these keel designs is they are under engineered...
Yes. The concepts are
Speed, speed, speed, speed. It comes at a cost.
I think it was three Summers ago...
You sure are. 11'-13' slender bulb keel hitting rocks at 10 knots, there's no engineering or building for that much
Well you can, but there are compromises.
How many ledges do you expect to hit offshore?
There's nothing extreme about this boat, including the keel.