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Article from 1965

  • Thread starter Thread starter egaito
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egaito

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  1. OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
Hatteras Model
41' CONVERTBLE-Series I (1964 - 1971)
Wasn't even looking for Hatt stuff, and ran across this article. Funny references, such as the "50ft, 100,000 Hatteras", and how the people that buy them aren't real boaters, rather "landlubbers", that journey from power outlet to power outlet, blowing marina breakers....LOL

==========================

Time Magazine - Plug-In Boats Friday, Sep. 03, 1965

Yachtsmen once prided themselves on being a hardy lot who asked only for "a tall ship and a star to steer her by." Even those who liked their ships squat and motorized took a certain pleasure in the austerities of self-sufficiency. The most popular models were made with no frills, on the reasoning that the buyers' basic impulse was to get away from it all, at a minimum expense. But in the past five years, more and more people have more and more money, and price no longer seems an object. Furthermore, the little woman has become a backseat helmsman, and she demands all the comforts of home.

Result is that the average new yacht is neither austere nor able to get very far away from it all. Chris Craft, the General Motors of the powerboat industry, now finds that 70% of its customers who want 28-ft. yachts and more also want and are willing to pay for a whole galaxy of luxury accessories. Among them: refrigerator-freezer, $1,250; four-burner stove with oven and broiler, $365; deluxe hot-water system with mixer faucets and spray hose, $1,210; electrically pumped shower, $450; automatic pilot, $1,195.

Boats Without Brine. Virtually every boat manufacturer has had the same experience. C. P. Leek & Sons Inc., a New Jersey company that built clippers 40 years before Ben Franklin flew his first kite, began making luxury items standard equipment on their Pacemaker yacht five years ago, has seen sales soar from $1,000,000 to $14 million. Its largest model, a 53-ft. motor yacht, offers all the amenities found on Chris Crafts, plus built-in television, bathtub, washer-dryer combination and ironing board, symbols of domesticity that would wrinkle the brow of any old salt. The 50-ft., $100,000 Hatteras usually comes off the ways weighed down with stereo tape and record players, a boat-wide complex of stereo speakers, built-in bar with electric ice-cube maker, dishwasher, disposal, wall-to-wall carpeting and air conditioning.

Thus there is a new breed of sailor that doesn't sail—at least not much or far. Says Dave Parker, executive vice president of the Hatteras Yacht Co.: "People who buy these yachts aren't sailors—they're landlubbers. They like to get there fast and drink long." And to enjoy Beethoven in stereo and bourbon on the rocks, the owner of a modern yacht must hook up to a marina's power line (and he often wants a telephone line) almost as soon as he shuts off his engine; his appliances draw too much juice to allow for quiet nights lying at anchor in secluded coves. If the new yachtsman wants to go for a cruise, he must plot his course from one electrical outlet to another, lest his TV dinners defrost, his ice cubes melt, and his electrical toilet break down.

No Charge. The latter-day salt does not seem to mind. In fact, rather than lose their charge and their communications, many never even leave the dock, preferring to remain permanently plugged in. Many just like to go down to their boats on a hot summer night, and sit on the stern deck for a quiet, cool drink and a chat with friends. Yacht clubs, which usually let visiting yachtsmen plug in free of charge, are not much happier. Said Ted Tolson, vice commodore of the St. Petersburg Yacht Club: "They hook up on our docks and blow all the fuses in the circuit. Then they holler like hell because the power's off."
 
I went to http://www.westegg.com/inflation/ and plugged in those numbers (assuming they weren't already adjusted). Are they really that high?

I recall someone in the Hargrave book saying in the early '60s that a 41' cost about 40K, which amounts to $260K today. But the above mentioned fridge would be $8K, the stove $2,400, hot water system $8K, $3K for the shower system, and autopilot system $8K.

Maybe that's right, though, since it warranted an article in Time, and since I do recall how car makers really got you with the options :)

DAN
 
Let's see....

1965... Was born/raised in Ft Lauderdale

I was 14 yrs old then..........

Only interested in fishing..... (oops, still am)

Oh, and boating.......

And now 43 years later.........

No difference.......

Cept now live in Jacksonville
 
I think we live in a golden age as far as the cost of most electronic toys, when I was younger a big TV was expensive adjusted to over $2,000 but now you can get an HDTV near 60" for that price, DVD player? Sound systems? cheap and cheaper unless you want the latest and most macho on the market. Whats too expensive for me is any new boat made over 30 feet and I make $50k gross a year. I can afford to buy an older boat and put newer toys in it but buying one already set up and new is out of my range of commitments. I just prefer to be debt free, the world and economy is too unstable.
 

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