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Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Fri, 23 Nov 2007 15:37:52 -0800 (PST), Chuck Gould wrote: What this country needs is to stop assuming that everybody smart enough to do so needs to go to college. There ought to be a first class trade school and/or union apprenticeship program available to people so they can learn to build and/or repair things properly. The way the system works now, we teach the kids to look down on anybody that doesn't have a "white collar" job, so some of the boat manufacturers are forced to hire the dumb-as-a-post screwups, often of dubious immigration status. Decent plumbers and electricians can get plenty of work that will never be sent "offshore", and a six-figure income is a realistic possibility for a sharp, hard working individual. I agree - totally. The problem, at least here in CT, are the apprenticeship rules the state adopted. We have a top flight state tech school system and the kids who go through the programs are motivated. The problem with the electrical/plumber programs comes after graduation. Each licensed plumber or electrician can only have one apprentice. With dictated pay scales and full benefits, plus mandated insurance costs, the package costs the employer more than he can afford for each apprentice. So for independant electricians/plumbers are in a losing proposition even if they want to take on apprentices. Add in the time required, even with school credits, to make Journeyman status and they flat out can't afford it. The bigger companies who can afford to take on apprentices for their Masters are limited to one per Master. I've spoken to several Masters who have told me their hands are tied and until the state loosens the rules, the shortage is only going to get worse. Part of the problem is that some of the manufacturers seem afraid of quality, or at least afraid of what it would do to their shares of the market if people were asked to pay for good workmanship. And not just boats. That makes sense to me. One thing, though, that could be a possibilty: Isn't that a big chain operation? Wonder if there isn't (at least unofficially) a "quick and dirty" series slapped together to allow cheapie pricing? Or, possibly, whether the retailer gets a screaming deal on all the reject layups? Cheapie pricing? $90,000 for a 26 CC with a 250 Optimax isn't exactly "cheap". I can add thirty thousand to that and buy Eisboch's Grand Banks which is one hell of a boat. Johnny Morris bought, in succession, Trophy and went to the well with those boats degrading the over all quality. Then he bought Mako and apparently did the same thing. If he follows form, the same thing will happen to Seacraft. Another example is Nitro. Outwardly, they seem to be well made. However, compare weights and really look close - the carpet is cheap, the boats are extremely light, vinyl is thin and you can scratch the gell coat just by looking at it wrong. In my opinion, they took a great boat line, went cheap on the manufacturing, loosened up the quality control and rely on the once great name to sell them. I was always a fan of Mako - never owned one, but I know guys who have them and was always impressed with form, fit and function - they were really tough boats and nice looking. They had a true innovation with the long forefoot and trailing deep vee which made them a real performer in heavy water - even in the smaller boats. These boats look like every other CC on the market, only worse in terms of quality. I was - well, not shocked certainly, but disappointed. Their prices are even more alarming. Then walk over to the SeaCraft boats. 25% more for...nothing. -dk |
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