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The yacht designer has about as much to do with the success of a boat
as the playwright has to do with the success of a Broadway production. The author produces a stack of paper maybe half an inch thick. The costumes, the scenery, the casting, the lighting, the music, the fine tuning of the actors delivery, are all in the hands of the director. This is 99% of what the audience sees. Doing all these things right won't turn a bad script into a good one but it is very easy to turn a good script onto a disaster. BTW I'm a former yacht designer and current commercial boat designer. http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma/Boats.htm -- Roger Long "engsol" wrote in message ... My "new" boat is a 1974 Yankee 30 Mk III, desiged by S&S. It's a srong hull, and a good sailing boat...so I've been told. But what I'm finding are construction details that I've never approve of, even being a newbie. My biggest complaint is that things such as teak trim, power panel, etc are "held" in place with self-tapping screws into raw fiberglass. You can guess how well that holds. I'm planning on fitting backing blocks. I got to wondering...how much does the designer have to do with the construction of a boat? To what level of detail does the designer specifiy the construction? Does the designer shape the hull, spec the rigging, armwave where the bunks, head and galley go, and the implementation is left up to the builder? Just curious....Norm B |