World's ugliest boat
Moderators: CaptPatrick, mike ohlstein, Bruce
- In Memory of Vicroy
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2340
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
World's ugliest boat
My initial entry, the Silverton 35 Motor Yacht:
http://www.silverton.com/models/35MY08/35MY08.html
After sinking all of them, we need to find the plans and burn them.....I promise its uglier in person that the pix.
UV
http://www.silverton.com/models/35MY08/35MY08.html
After sinking all of them, we need to find the plans and burn them.....I promise its uglier in person that the pix.
UV
- Russ Pagels
- Senior Member
- Posts: 513
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 18:17
- Location: NC
- TailhookTom
- Senior Member
- Posts: 985
- Joined: Jul 3rd, '06, 14:12
Along the same lines, I nominate this floating pile of guano!
http://www.boattrader.com/listing/1998- ... t-98691008
http://www.boattrader.com/listing/1998- ... t-98691008
- Harry Babb
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2354
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:45
- Location: Fairhope Al
- Contact:
- In Memory of Vicroy
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2340
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
http://www.carveryachts.com/36mariner.aspx
These guys have been making them ugly for years. Gotta say though for the size they sure pack alot of crap in 'em and they still have room to lounge about.
They do make a great boat to hang in when the weather is too lousy to be outdoors...at the dock of course.
Another good thing...the way they are built, they won't be around all that much longer. Little chance they will ever see 40-50years of service...thinking 20 will be pushing it.
These guys have been making them ugly for years. Gotta say though for the size they sure pack alot of crap in 'em and they still have room to lounge about.
They do make a great boat to hang in when the weather is too lousy to be outdoors...at the dock of course.
Another good thing...the way they are built, they won't be around all that much longer. Little chance they will ever see 40-50years of service...thinking 20 will be pushing it.
- TailhookTom
- Senior Member
- Posts: 985
- Joined: Jul 3rd, '06, 14:12
UV == you definitely picked the cream of the crop -- there was one just like what I showed at my dock a few years back -- I could never figure out how you would dock the pile of poo -- there is a six foot swim platform off the back and no means of seeing pretty much anything from the bridge -- maybe backup cams??? The other thing that amuses me on these Euro styles -- how does one walk forward????? Nothing flat, nothing to hold and no room.
- Gert van Leest
- Senior Member
- Posts: 314
- Joined: Jan 17th, '11, 16:30
- Location: Warmond, NL
- Contact:
- PeterPalmieri
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2612
- Joined: Nov 12th, '10, 11:26
- Location: Babylon, NY
I was on that carver Carl posted a link too. Didn't leave the dock just walked on after being tied up next to them for the day. As ugly as they may be man they've got a lot of creature comforts.
In my neck of the woods many boats make the 3-4 mile trip across the bay to fire island for a weekend of drinking. Never close to the inlet or in water deeper then 15 feet.
Not my thing but these types I see around don't get beat up often fill up the tank once for the season. What's typically funnier then the looks of the boat is watching the guy scream at his wife as he smashes into pilings trying to dock the thing.
In my neck of the woods many boats make the 3-4 mile trip across the bay to fire island for a weekend of drinking. Never close to the inlet or in water deeper then 15 feet.
Not my thing but these types I see around don't get beat up often fill up the tank once for the season. What's typically funnier then the looks of the boat is watching the guy scream at his wife as he smashes into pilings trying to dock the thing.
1969 31 Bertram FBC "East Wind" hull #315939
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 649
- Joined: Sep 10th, '06, 19:43
- Location: NY
- In Memory Walter K
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2912
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:25
- Location: East Hampton LI, NY
- Contact:
In order to have good design, you have to be able to recognize bad design, and not allow it! That was my philosophy when I was working, and that was Steve Jobs' philosophy behind the success of Apple. If there's a choice between products that do the same thing, and one is ugly and one is well designed, which would you pick? (B-31 owners already did). Remember, someone had to approve those things. Also remember that a Camel is a Greyhound designed by a committee.
i cant find it but i had a link to an ad "silverton....your floating condo"..you can't make this stuff up!.
BTW...the ugliest boat ever made is on the hard at a marina in hampton bays. i mean REAL ugly.
BTW...the ugliest boat ever made is on the hard at a marina in hampton bays. i mean REAL ugly.
Last edited by randall on Nov 21st, '11, 19:33, edited 1 time in total.
- Harry Babb
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2354
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:45
- Location: Fairhope Al
- Contact:
Re: World's ugliest boat
Happy Thanksgiving, UVVicroy wrote:My initial entry, the Silverton 35 Motor Yacht:
http://www.silverton.com/models/35MY08/35MY08.html
After sinking all of them, we need to find the plans and burn them.....I promise its uglier in person that the pix.
UV
I agree with you .......that is the ugliest boat I have ever seen.
Paul
1961 Sportfish Hull# 5-135
- Harry Babb
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2354
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:45
- Location: Fairhope Al
- Contact:
- In Memory of Vicroy
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2340
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
Rawleigh,
You are exactly right about most boatbuilders wrapping fiberglass around a pre-designed interior, resulting in the "ugly boat category". The opposite is why our B-31s are so unique. At Dick Bertram's request, Ray Hunt designed the most efficient and best performing hull possible in the 30 foot range, and then at Bertram's request, Jack Hargrave designed the superstructure around the hull using his best efforts to give it balance and classic lines. Needless to say, the Hunt/Hargrave joint effort on this project resulted in the timeless classic that fostered this fraternity. (Thanks again, Capt. Patrick!)
You are exactly right about most boatbuilders wrapping fiberglass around a pre-designed interior, resulting in the "ugly boat category". The opposite is why our B-31s are so unique. At Dick Bertram's request, Ray Hunt designed the most efficient and best performing hull possible in the 30 foot range, and then at Bertram's request, Jack Hargrave designed the superstructure around the hull using his best efforts to give it balance and classic lines. Needless to say, the Hunt/Hargrave joint effort on this project resulted in the timeless classic that fostered this fraternity. (Thanks again, Capt. Patrick!)
I love the way this guy has his boat tied. I guess I've been doing it wrong all these years.jackryan wrote:You gotta have a Bayliner in this thread:
http://www.yachtworld.com/core/listing/ ... &noOfPic=1
JR
Regards,
Doug L.
Doug L.
- Pete Fallon
- Senior Member
- Posts: 1318
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 23:10
- Location: Stuart Fl. and Salem, Ma.
Guy's
Not only are there ugly boats but the safety factor comes into play, the uglier they are the less sea worthy they become. I surveyed a 45 Maxium motor yacht a while back, this thing was butt ugly to look at. The mechanic and I were the only ones on board, he stepped into the cockpit and the boat started to rock, I got in and it moved a lot more. Just tied to the dock I could get this turd to really rock back and forth by shifting my weight back and forth. 45' long 14'6'' wide and only 30" of draft with bridge clearance of 19'. The capacity plate on the bridge stated no more than 1000 pounds allowed on the fly bridge. Thats only 5 people and it had seating for 10. This bucket of crap pounded crossing wakes at speed, had windage like a tractor trailer and almost touched the gunwales when wallowing a trough. Needless to say my report stated that the vessel was not to be used in sea conditions over 2' and winds of 15 mph max. The boat went to Russia and I never heard anything more.
Pete
Not only are there ugly boats but the safety factor comes into play, the uglier they are the less sea worthy they become. I surveyed a 45 Maxium motor yacht a while back, this thing was butt ugly to look at. The mechanic and I were the only ones on board, he stepped into the cockpit and the boat started to rock, I got in and it moved a lot more. Just tied to the dock I could get this turd to really rock back and forth by shifting my weight back and forth. 45' long 14'6'' wide and only 30" of draft with bridge clearance of 19'. The capacity plate on the bridge stated no more than 1000 pounds allowed on the fly bridge. Thats only 5 people and it had seating for 10. This bucket of crap pounded crossing wakes at speed, had windage like a tractor trailer and almost touched the gunwales when wallowing a trough. Needless to say my report stated that the vessel was not to be used in sea conditions over 2' and winds of 15 mph max. The boat went to Russia and I never heard anything more.
Pete
1961 Express Vizcaya Hull 186 12-13-61
- PeterPalmieri
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2612
- Joined: Nov 12th, '10, 11:26
- Location: Babylon, NY
I can deal with ugly, I've seen plenty of ugly stuff that someone else thinks is beautiful. Makes the world go 'round. But when it's a design that compromises safety to that degree that's bad. Especially considering the uninformed buyer likely has no clue.Pete Fallon wrote:Guy's
Not only are there ugly boats but the safety factor comes into play, the uglier they are the less sea worthy they become. I surveyed a 45 Maxium motor yacht a while back, this thing was butt ugly to look at. The mechanic and I were the only ones on board, he stepped into the cockpit and the boat started to rock, I got in and it moved a lot more. Just tied to the dock I could get this turd to really rock back and forth by shifting my weight back and forth. 45' long 14'6'' wide and only 30" of draft with bridge clearance of 19'. The capacity plate on the bridge stated no more than 1000 pounds allowed on the fly bridge. Thats only 5 people and it had seating for 10. This bucket of crap pounded crossing wakes at speed, had windage like a tractor trailer and almost touched the gunwales when wallowing a trough. Needless to say my report stated that the vessel was not to be used in sea conditions over 2' and winds of 15 mph max. The boat went to Russia and I never heard anything more.
Pete
1969 31 Bertram FBC "East Wind" hull #315939
-
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Jul 2nd, '06, 06:26
That style Bayliner...as kid there was one on our dock. They were following us home one day and caught the wake of a passing boat...not a big boat or a big wake...but that Bayliner with Mom, Dad and Daughter on the Bridge just teetered on the edge of going over...the closest I have ever seen to a boat capsizing...it just hung at that spot for what seemed like an eternity, straightened up a bit, laid back a bit then righted itself...you wanna see people come down off a bridge quick....
To each his own.
Guy with the Carver...just sought of backs in and when he can't see the dock anymore...or bumps the dock...he knows he's in. Strange way to design a boat...and you have to love the ramp going from the Bridge to the foredeck...it's a nice steep walkway with molded non-skid...totally worthless when its wet... Slide down right under the bow rail...like a Slip'n'Slide right off the bow. Smart design.
To each his own.
Guy with the Carver...just sought of backs in and when he can't see the dock anymore...or bumps the dock...he knows he's in. Strange way to design a boat...and you have to love the ramp going from the Bridge to the foredeck...it's a nice steep walkway with molded non-skid...totally worthless when its wet... Slide down right under the bow rail...like a Slip'n'Slide right off the bow. Smart design.
- MarkS
- Senior Member
- Posts: 1160
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 08:40
- Location: The Frozen Tundra/EX-democratic stronghold Wisconsin
Sim I don't know what happened at Carver they used to make a decent looking boat but they still fall under the clorox bottle heading. Like a freekin bobber. I can almost spit to Pulaski, WI. from here. (Home of Carver.)
Luis That is a stunning collection of spew, just where did you find all those gems! LOL
I have seen SF99 or Sigma parked off Medano Beach near the Cabo harbor. That thing looks like the head of a skyrat (Seagull for those that love them)
This is a fun thread! You know when you get to dance with the queen of the prom the rest are sort of "High Milers!"
-M
Luis That is a stunning collection of spew, just where did you find all those gems! LOL
I have seen SF99 or Sigma parked off Medano Beach near the Cabo harbor. That thing looks like the head of a skyrat (Seagull for those that love them)
This is a fun thread! You know when you get to dance with the queen of the prom the rest are sort of "High Milers!"
-M
72 Bertram 25 FBC "Razorsharp" Hull #254-1849
Things of quality have no fear of time.
Bondage to spiritual faith faith to great courage courage to liberty liberty to abundance abundance to complacency to apathy to dependence to bondage
Things of quality have no fear of time.
Bondage to spiritual faith faith to great courage courage to liberty liberty to abundance abundance to complacency to apathy to dependence to bondage
Amen.Tommy wrote:
You are exactly right about most boatbuilders wrapping fiberglass around a pre-designed interior, resulting in the "ugly boat category". The opposite is why our B-31s are so unique. At Dick Bertram's request, Ray Hunt designed the most efficient and best performing hull possible in the 30 foot range, and then at Bertram's request, Jack Hargrave designed the superstructure around the hull using his best efforts to give it balance and classic lines. Needless to say, the Hunt/Hargrave joint effort on this project resulted in the timeless classic that fostered this fraternity. (Thanks again, Capt. Patrick!)
Ugly or not...I guess a builder will build whatever the people will put down their money on. People want the features of a
50' boat crammed into a 35'...and come in at a moderately low cost. Something has to give...styling, power and seaworthyness seem to be on the table. Ugly just becomes a by product. My opinion anyway.
Whatever...it's just good to be on the water.
50' boat crammed into a 35'...and come in at a moderately low cost. Something has to give...styling, power and seaworthyness seem to be on the table. Ugly just becomes a by product. My opinion anyway.
Whatever...it's just good to be on the water.
- In Memory Walter K
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2912
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:25
- Location: East Hampton LI, NY
- Contact:
Walter, thats a reason many boats just stay at the dock.
I don't care what you have...we are all just corks in the water. Bayliner to the QE-II....although I whole heartedly agree with you Walter. I am just amazed when I see some of these monstrosities out of the water. You have what appears to be 20-30 feet of structure above the waterline and maybe two-three feet under the water...just don't seem right.
I don't care what you have...we are all just corks in the water. Bayliner to the QE-II....although I whole heartedly agree with you Walter. I am just amazed when I see some of these monstrosities out of the water. You have what appears to be 20-30 feet of structure above the waterline and maybe two-three feet under the water...just don't seem right.
I don't think the owners actually know what the boat looks like on the water---they go to a boat show and board the stern---walk through big sliding glass doors and see a mini apartment---their first mate(wife) is with them and they are sold----i have a neighbor that tells a story that he sold a boat with the same full tank he bought it with-
Well Harry, I have to agree that Ozi and Contessa are more or less nice but the Lionwind is kinda more then uggly.Harry Babb wrote:Luis
I like OZI and CONTESSA........dem 2 ain't no ugly boat.....
hb
UV the gals feel that the weather is to cold so....maybe they are inside.
Greetings
1969 Hull #313-897
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot] and 34 guests