Angela
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2005
- Messages
- 3,879
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- 58' MOTOR YACHT-Series I (1977 - 1980)
Those plastic portlights came along sometime in the 70s. For example, Ed's 1968 Hatt (and I believe Pascal's 1970 Hatt, as well) had the nice heavy bronze portlights - real quality as compared to the plastic stuff. I've got the plastic stuff and even the neighboring Sea Ray took one out while docking. Had mine been made of bronze, it would have taught the Sea Ray something about docking instead of breaking off my portlight. Instead, Ed and I got a lesson in how to replace them.
Another irritating change was in the door latches for the cabinets. It's a household door pull with the plastic ball catch on the inside. They don't hold all that well, and even in my slip, I've had to chase dishes across the salon when they came spewing out because the plastic ball catches aren't that strong. I've since had to add "baby latches" to help secure them. Ed's 1968 Hatt has the nice metal pulls that you have to press your thumb down on a button to release the metal catch inside. His don't just pop open a wake comes by. And it's not that mine are worn out, either. The way they are designed to function is that some amount of force pulling (or the dishes inside pushing) on the door lets it open (kind of like velcro!). The ones on the older Hatts don't allow the door to come open with pulling/pushing. You have to trip a latch to release the door - something a passing wake can't do.
It's stuff like that that I consider cost cutting as the years went by. The flip side of that is that my holding tank fittings, for example, were still made of bronze by 1980, though the dip tube did rot off. The irony is that I replaced all of that with plastic. LOL That dip tube isn't going to rot off again, not in my lifetime! I like plastic...but, only where I want it and that's not in my portlights or cabinet door securing hardware. Ditto on the drawer hardware. Oh well...I knew what she was when I bought and love her anyway.
The OEM non-marine sliding glass patio door...just plain stupid! (and I was being "polite"). That has got to be Hatteras's biggest brain fart of all time!
Another irritating change was in the door latches for the cabinets. It's a household door pull with the plastic ball catch on the inside. They don't hold all that well, and even in my slip, I've had to chase dishes across the salon when they came spewing out because the plastic ball catches aren't that strong. I've since had to add "baby latches" to help secure them. Ed's 1968 Hatt has the nice metal pulls that you have to press your thumb down on a button to release the metal catch inside. His don't just pop open a wake comes by. And it's not that mine are worn out, either. The way they are designed to function is that some amount of force pulling (or the dishes inside pushing) on the door lets it open (kind of like velcro!). The ones on the older Hatts don't allow the door to come open with pulling/pushing. You have to trip a latch to release the door - something a passing wake can't do.
It's stuff like that that I consider cost cutting as the years went by. The flip side of that is that my holding tank fittings, for example, were still made of bronze by 1980, though the dip tube did rot off. The irony is that I replaced all of that with plastic. LOL That dip tube isn't going to rot off again, not in my lifetime! I like plastic...but, only where I want it and that's not in my portlights or cabinet door securing hardware. Ditto on the drawer hardware. Oh well...I knew what she was when I bought and love her anyway.

The OEM non-marine sliding glass patio door...just plain stupid! (and I was being "polite"). That has got to be Hatteras's biggest brain fart of all time!