" Personally, I would look at it as a short cut and it would set of a warning to look closer at where else they cut corners."
If you mean that not using wood flooring is a "shortcut," I don't agree. I don't know of any new production boats that use real wood on any floor. Therefore, I don't think it could be looked at as corner cutting to use a "plastic" (or whatever the heck they are) product. When coupled with the fact that the oem for most of the boats on this site was sheet linoleum/asphalt tile, there is no reason to expect that real wood would be the replacement for it. As I noted, Hatteras themselves use Amtico as they note in the brochure for the 64MY:
The fully equipped galley features... and Amtico vinyl-strip flooring
HOWEVER - as Paul pointed out, if I was looking at two boats that were essentially the same otherwise and one had a REAL teak/holly floor (NOT teak/holly - veneered plywood) I would certainly select the teak holly boat.
Those of you who have been on the site for a while know that about 2 years ago I did our boat in Amtico teak/holly. I posted a bunch of info/tips/pics on the project. I have since deleted the pics because my pic file was full and I couldn't post any more. Boat brokers who looked at the finished floor (passageway, all heads, galley, forward helm area) were amazed on how good it looked. I even had several get down on their knees to examine it and they still said it looks like real wood. Several boat owners in the marina looked at it, raved, and had it installed on their boats. It absolutely DOES look like real wood and, installed properly (with the epoxy adjesive, NOT the single part adhesive, it is extremely durable.
BUT it doesn't look like real teak and holly and that has come to bother me in the nearly two years since I did it.
When I say it doesn't look like real t/h it's not because it doesn't look like wood, it's because it doesn't look like real (solid) t/h looks AS INSTALLED IN A BOAT - at least any boat I have seen.
I have a friend who, late last season, bought a beautiful 53 at an honest-to-God giveaway price. The boat's interior had solid teak holly floors and I immediately said to the Admiral, "I should have put this in!" She agreed.
So if I had it to do over, even though our floors get rave reviews by anyone who comes aboard, I would not consider anything other than real teak and real holly planks. Again, NOT t/h plywood which looks more like plastic than do some of the plastics and is not durable at all because there's nothing there except a 1/32" strip of product on the plywood.
If you look at a well maintained solid teak/holly floor on an old boat, you'll see that NONE of the simulations look like them. To me the worst is any product that isn't in plank form. Sheets of material - plastic or plywood - look just like what they are; sheet goods. There is no grain variation like real wood and no random plank length. It all just looks like someone spray painted the thing. THe problem with the amtico is that the product doesn't mimic TH the way it is normally installed on boats. The Amtico Teak planks have much more grain and color variation than does the real thing as it is installed on boats. Additionally, the planks are too wide. THe Amtico flooring looks like real hardwood flooring as is frequently laid in a house - not in a boat.
I do note that on the pics of the flooring on the current Hatts, I prefer the look of that Amtico to what I installed on Brigadoon. The new Hatt's fake wood looks a bit more like the real thing because of the narrower plank width. It may be possible to special order this from Amtico. However, to my eye, it still doesn't look like a real TH solid wood floor. The grain/color is wrong.
But, as I started out saying, I don't think anyone should hesitate in using whatever material they are happy with for the floors. The oem floors on our boats were covered with plain old sheet linoleum that nearly no one would have specified for their new house kitchen in the same era. Almost anything you'd think of putting on these floors would be an "upgrade." It's probably one of the only "upgrades" to one of these boats that isn't, in reality, a downgrade.
Sorry - this got longer than I intended...