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You have to identify yourself are you a boat builder, a fixer upper, a
sailor or all of these? The first thing you have to do is to make some financial scenarios. In making these pro formats you have to include a learning curve and add the cost to the value analysis. Next you have to calculate the cost of buying what you need on a piece meal basis or all at once. The ideal scenario is as follows: you know exactly the design you want, you have a precise bill of material, you know the time it will take including the learning curve to do each tasks, you are able to compute a critical path method (CPM) and are keeping this CPM updated at all time, you do not change the design and bill of material. If you are building a sailboat where you have lots of money invested you should have a builder insurance. It will be a wise thing to check the municipal bylaws where the boat will be build. The things to avoid is to finalized the design as you go, not using a proven design, not knowing the time and schedule requirement and forecasted cost. Also make sure that once the build is finish you have the facilities to launch it. "scbafreak" u25927@uwe wrote in message news:6583fa26456f4@uwe... I am currently having a very difficult time getting information on boat building and I would really appreciate any help I could get here. Here is the situation. I am 26 and live in an apartment in Orange County California. I am considering building a boat starting a few years from now to live on. I plan to start several years from now to allow time to save money and get more sailing experience. I am largely plannng to do this because of outrageous housing costs in this area making it very difficult to purchase a house as a first time buyer but also because I think that I would really enjoy living on a boat. Ideally I would like to have enough money put aside to fund most of the build but I will, obviously be putting more money into the project as I build. I think that if I take five years to build then this should be reasonable. I should be able to build in my Dads back yard which has a rather large cement pad and he may be willing to let me invade his house for a while. He doesn't live far from me so i can still work and do all of the things I normaly do and build on weekends and at night. I plan to do as much of the construction as I am capable of to both keep costs down and ensure that I get a good quality boat. I like the idea of building my own boat as I have built many things before and I am currently working on building small sailing outrigger canoes. We have all of the tools needed and a lot of experiencein woodworking. My dad would be willing to help when needed as he is retired and has some free time. Ideally I would like to come away with a nice place to live that I do not need to make loan payments but I realize that certain equipment I may need to get a loan for (such as radios and navigation, sails, spars....). I want something that could potentially last the rest of my life and be sailerd all over the world. I am looking at Bruce Roberts designs. Does anyone have any opinion as to them. I will be doing wood construction in either Plywood or strip composite and the design I am currently most interested in is the Centenial Spray 38. I have never heard of a Spray as a type of boat elsewhere so i don't really know what makes that different from other designs. The best I can tell from looking at it is that the cabin seems to be raised a little further aft than the the rest of the designs giving them a little more headroom, they don't seem to have an internal cockpit and the hull shape seems to be a lttle different. I have no idea if I am right. Here is what I would really like to know. Has anyone out there done this or something similar that I can answer these questions for me. 1) How much will this cost. 2) How many man hours would it take. 3) How much of the build (in approximate percentage) must be done before I can launch it and move onto it. 4) Is it realistically cheaper to buy an old boat then fix it up to make it realiable and what I would want. (this would probably only be an option if building turns out to be too expensive but would not be limited to wood boats) Everyone seems to say that there is no real answer to these questions because it depends on the person and the boat, but that is really not very helpful. I understand that these things can range but if someone has done it themselves then that would give me some sort of comparison. Bruce Roberts designs say to buy the study plans and price out from there as they contain complete materials lists but I would like to have some sort of range before I spend $125. When i am ready I will definately do this and decide more definitavely but for now i just want a general idea of what it takes so I can think about it. Someone please help. So far I have not been able to get any kind of answers on these questions at all. |
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