The following questions come into my mind:mastreb wrote:The economics of building a boat are just not there.
Before I bought my new boat, I spoke with two designers all the way through to the quote phase, and the bottom line is that it costs $20/lb. to build a "cheap" boat and $30/lb. to build a luxury boat, with the average one-off construction coming in around $25/lb.
The MacGregor costs $7.50/lb. unpowered, or 1/3rd as much as you could possibly build for. It is the least expensive production boat I've ever heard of. Completely fit-out and powered it's $12.50 lb.
A Beneteau costs $15/lb. well fit-out and ready to go.
Also consider that a stitch-and-glue plywood copy of a MacGregor is going to weight at least 2X as much. The boat will perform dramatically differently because of that extra weight, requiring a larger motor and more sail area to match the performance. You can't make a boat that weighs less than a MacGregor--Roger tried taking a layer of glass off to make La Perla Noir lighter and it suffered from cracking in the deck.
I've spent a lot of time playing with the idea of building, but there needs to be a revolutionary new building methodology or material in order to make one-off production cost competitive with mass production.
Taking an existing hull and rebuilding it to fit your specifications probably makes the most sense.
- With the extra cost, maintenance, and weight of a plywood boat, what is it going to offer to attract customers as compared with a production fiberglass boat?
- The customization you offer is a nice feature, but how many people will choose a custom plywood boat over a low cost production fiberglass boat?
Back in the early 2000's I visited a boatyard in Costa Mesa, CA and they had an interesting way of building custom boats. Instead of using molds, they would setup mold stations out of plywood. Then they would fasten foam sheets to the stations to get the hull shape. Next, they would lay fiberglass on the "inside" of the foam sheets. Once the "inside" fiberglass cured, they removed the plywood stations, turned the hull upside down, and laid fiberglass on the "outside" of the foam.
Not sure if you can use this approach, but it seemed like a good way to get low volume, light, fiberglass hulls. Instead of having to store a mold, you would only need to store a stack of plywood stations. If you could make this work I think you could be more competitive against a production fiberglass boat.
