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!Steel!!!! YYuuuukkkkkk!!!!! (backs away brandishing crucifix)
You couldn't *give* me a steel boat. I was in the Navy. rhys wrote: Yeah, but wasn't it spec'd by the same minds that ordered a $1,900 toilet seat and a $300 hammer? G You say that like it's a bad thing. Actually, the Navy takes rust prevention very seriously and invests a heck of a lot of time & money on it. And with a great deal of success, but not from an aesthetic standpoint. ... What can I say...steel DONE PROPERLY (bulletproof coatings and ease of interior hull access) and MAINTAINED SENSIBLY (don't drop pennies down the bilge...keep a pot of touch up paint for deck and topside chips) can last decades Sure. ... and provide a safe and easy ride in the 40-50 foot range. Sorry, you're dreaming. There is no "safe & easy ride" for a small (say, less than 20 tons) sailboat in conditions likely to produce 40 to 50 foot seas, especially if they break. The material the boat is made of is less important the it's overall design characteristics... the more like a submarine, the better for such... but the worse for everything else. But again, I digress. A big part of my objection to steel as a material for small sailboats is that it's not inherently suitable. Too heavy and too limp. Unless you're building a boat that's at least 20 tons... and 50 would be a more likely margin... there is no sense, engineering wise, in building it out of steel. Maybe that's why I like steel: liveaboard, multi-year cruising requires in my mind some of the same thinking that goes into workboats, if not the actual "look", mind you. Everyone admires the plush upholstery...I'm looking for the lashing points for the lee cloths. G Most folk like the marble inlay in the head...I look for the shower sump and the runs to the battery G. One of the steel boats I've had experience with was owned by the Great Lakes Naval training Center Sailing Club. It was a 40-ish foot ketch, very heavy, an empty box with no accomodation inside. The empty space was necessary for sail & tool stowage. I don't know how many sails the boat carried but it must have been 30+. We used to entertain ourselves by experimenting with mizzen staysails, of which there were at least a dozen. It also had padeyes welded all over it for tying stuff down, all seemed strong enough to lift the boat from. .... Given the current market conditions, I think we'll see a lot of racing boat conversions over the next few years. I think that's very dodgy, because if you put weight in a race boat, you just get a slow race boat rather quickly. That greatly depends on how it's done. The racer starts out with better hull lines, a higher ballast ratio, stronger structure. You could a significant part of the boat's weight before degrading the stability and performance unless you add it all at bow or stern, very high up, etc etc. The real problem is that such conversions are too likely to be undertaken by people who don't know or don't pay much attention to such details, and may not have chosen the basic boat wisely in the first place. However I've seen a couple of pretty nice ones. But it's an interesting question: "If you had a cool $1/4 mil to spend on a sailboat, what would you get?" For that cash, you should get the IDEAL 42-45 footer custom-built or semi-custom built on the interior. ??? I don't think you're to get a custom 40+ footer for that kind of money. Double, maybe. You could always buy the design, contract the hull and do much of the fitting out yourself... not my cup o' tea. ... As a future world cruiser, I can live with heavier, less space-age materials, but I want my systems and stowage simple, accessible and as robust as is reasonable for cost and weight. The cherry veneer is irrelevant in a Force 10 blow. Agreed. But I like a boat that looks good, and how much time do you spend battling gales anyway? Fresh Breezes- Doug King |