I think Pascoe is a big cynic, but I have to agree that boats and boating are getting beyond the means of average working people, which is why I will never own a new boat. True nobody wants a boat with no ammenities, but there has to be a middle ground where you can get a 26-30' boat with A/C and a decent V-berth that doesn't cost as much or more than your house. I beleive in keeping things as simple as possible, especially in the harsh marine environment. Thats why my new to me boat is a 1989 Sea Ray. I could have bought newer for similar money, but at that vintage, I got a wider beam (11 feet) , no molded in seating or swim platforms (more cockpit space for fishing), a manual head with holding tank(cheap and easy to work on), and carbed GM 350 engines I can work on myself. I still have A/C and heat, hot water and shower(no need to straddle the toilet) and a large v-berth and comfortable sleeping for 6. And all this in a 30' boat. The fact that the interior and most of the cockpit, deck and helm fittings and switches are origional and functional is a statement to their simplicity and initial quality/ruggedness. I could have had a generator and central vac. system if I wanted but didn't need them or want the maint. Is it a perfect boat? of course not, but my family and I don't feel like we are camping in a pup tent either.
I don't understand why some things on boats today are considered better than their predecessors. Take that manual head I have. Its simple, works well and I could replace the whole thing for under $200 if I had to. Many newer boats have vacuum assisted flushing toilets, or fancy high tech "poo burners" that need lots of maint. and cost big bucks up front and big bucks to fix. Lets not loose sight of what these things get used for, you **** in them. Is the experience enhanced by not having to pump the fixture when finished?
The K.I.S principle applies here, the more complicated you make the machine, the more failure points you have and the easier it is to break it.
I realize that builders make what the customer wants (to a point they try to tell you what you need) but alot more units could be sold if the potential customer base were borader and that could be achieved by taking a page from Henry Ford and building reliable affordable boats. This would lower per unit costs that would make manufacturing the boat less costly for the builder thru economy of scale. The boat building industry has fallen victim to its own greed.
JMHO