Mid Size Power Boats

Mid Size Power Boats

A Guide for Discriminating Buyers

by David Pascoe

Purchase at IngramSpark with $3.00 off:

Buy Now
HOME > Mid Size Power Boats > Chapter 1 >


The Nature of the Industry

The issue of quality and the reputation of the builder is one that the novice or first time boat buyer needs to pay close attention to.

As mentioned earlier, due to the harsh environment in which they spend their lives, boats need to be built of high quality materials with consummate skill.

Otherwise, the boat will deteriorate rapidly and the boat owner will end up seeing his investment deteriorate at an alarming rate.

In order to understand the nature of quality in boats, we need to have a basic understanding of the nature of the boat building industry.

The shortcomings of boat building industry essentially boil down to matter of money and the effect that has on resources.

The boat building industry is unlike most other major industries that produce large, expensive products. As industries go, it is smallish and remarkably undercapitalized, unlike the auto industry, and which makes for a useful comparison.

The auto industry is very consolidated and limited to little more than a dozen giant international corporations with revenues in the hundreds of billions, each with a worldwide dealership network of thousands of dealers.

The gross revenues of a General Motors or Toyota are greater than that of many nations. As for boat builders, their revenues may number from a few million to a few hundreds of millions; up to barely a billion.

At any given time there are around 1200 boat builders offering products in the US. Imagine if you had 1200 auto makers to choose from!

That the boat building industry has not consolidated and generated a “big three” (though it is not that some have not tried) is due to the fact that it is highly vulnerable to recessions and economic downturns.

When the economy slows down, boat sales come to a near complete stop because pleasure craft are not a necessity like cars and appliances or homes.

Every time we have a serious recession, about half of all builders go bust. Hence, few who understand this industry are willing to invest in it, for it is far too risky, thus making it extremely difficult for a builder to raise capital by means of selling stock.

It is even hard for them to get bank loans. The recent demise of OMC during boom times is a good case in point.

Yet another problem affects the small boat industry: per unit profits are so low due to strong competition that it becomes almost impossible for these companies to survive economic downturns.

This is a case where competition tends to lower prices to the point of extinction.

While it appears to buyers that boat builders are getting filthy rich, through what appears to them to be outrageous prices, the truth is that most won’t make enough to survive the business cycle.

I have personally witnessed this seven times in my own lifetime, and there is no reason to believe that these cycles will not continue, or that the industry will fundamentally change in any way.

The fact of life is that boat building is a marginal industry.

This situation causes problems that inevitably seriously affect product quality and reliability. First, boat builders either can’t afford, or won’t hire, the kind of experienced high priced engineering talent that is needed to assure high quality and reliability.

The truth is that boat building pretty much fits that old saying about watching sausage being made. If you could see it, you probably wouldn’t want to eat it.

Boat building now, as in the past, suffers from a serious lack of R&D, product testing and engineering skill.

And now that it has entered the realm of high tech plastics chemistry and composites, the engineering skills required have become even more complex.

Yet the industry continues to make-do as it always has on the basis of trial and error. Unfortunately, much of this kind of product testing is done at the consumer’s expense, with the boat buyer as beta tester, which helps explain why the industry as a whole has had such a poor record of customer satisfaction.

The truth of this could not be more forcefully demonstrated than by a large number of boat builders returning to an idea that failed in the 1960’s when it was first tried.

This involved the use of cores in boat bottoms. A core is a method of attempting to increase strength and reducing weight, while at the same time reducing the amount of costly materials by substituting cheaper materials.

A core basically makes a sandwich of a cheaper material such as balsa wood or foam between two layers of fiberglass. What this does is essentially create a truss that is stronger in certain situations, but not all.

The great risk of this method was the risk of water getting into the core since the materials used are porous and contain large amounts of air space.

And when water gets into the core, boat bottoms begin to fall apart. It was a bad idea 40 years ago, and is a bad idea now as cored bottom boats are now meeting the same fate as they did back in the 1960’s and 70’s.

Consider another point: Automobile models typically sell in units of hundreds of thousands and up into the millions.

Boats don’t come anywhere close to that. A boat model that sells a total of 500 units is a lot in this industry. The larger and higher priced the boat, of course, the lower total unit sales will be.

What this means for the consumer is that very few boat models are in production long enough that whatever shortcomings they may have will not have had the time to be perfected, assuming that as problems are discovered, the builder corrects them.

Obviously, the longer a model is in production, the more likely it is that it will become perfected as problems and weaknesses are discovered over time, and then get the opportunity to be corrected.

This used to be common wisdom with car buying: never by the first year of any new model. This maxim can be equally well applied to boat buying today.

From year to year in the auto industry, chassis and engines tend to remain the same, while it is only the shape of the outer wrapper and interior that is changed annually.

In large part this is why the auto makers have become so large and prosperous. Thus the fundamental and most important part of the car has the opportunity to become highly perfected.

Boat builders do not have this advantage. The boat hull and deck is the chassis, and thus major model changes forces major changes in tooling. Hence, model changes are very costly and builder’s profits suffer, as does product reliability.

Finally, for the most part, boats are hand made items. There is very little in the way of robotics in boat building.

Some have criticized the industry for being primitive and backward in this respect. However, they fail to realize that the market simply will not support this kind of huge capital investment. And besides, no one has yet figured out how to design a robot that can lay up fiberglass.

With these things in mind, it only makes good sense to be careful about from whom you buy.

Just because a company has been successful in promoting and selling its products is no guarantee of quality and good service.

Just because a company offers what appears to be a good warranty is no guarantee that the warranty will be honored, especially if a recession hits and the company goes out of business.

To show you that this is no idle threat, consider that in the recession of 1989-92, over 50% of all boat builders went bankrupt, including many of the industry’s best known names like Bertram and Viking.

When bankrupt companies get sold, typically only the assets are sold, without the liabilities, which means warranty liabilities.

So, even though the brand name continues to exist, the legal obligation to honor warranties given by prior ownership usually doesn’t.



HOME > Mid Size Power Boats >

To Page Top