Explosion of Aluminum boat builders

A fabricator on the island? Mostly I'm just interested in looking at smaller aluminum cuddy's and figuring out the ideal layout and power. Really interested in lighter motors so I can run with a kicker and have a long range, it would be great to do some northern family fishing in like black jack. Likely end up buying SS or other BC built boat in a few years.
He's actually in Alberta but I would think that there'd be closer people.
 
Strange. Why would you need water ballast in a small boat? Why would you want salt water in the bottom of your boat on a regular basis? If your boat is too unstable at rest when out on the water then maybe you need to go in. Seems like more maintenance issues over time to me.
 
The Ausi and Kiwi aluminum boat manufacturers are light years ahead of us in their designs. I just drool at some of their boats. Don't get me wrong, we produce some nice boats here, but theirs are outstanding by comparison.
 
The Ausi and Kiwi aluminum boat manufacturers are light years ahead of us in their designs. I just drool at some of their boats. Don't get me wrong, we produce some nice boats here, but theirs are outstanding by comparison.
They seem to like double hulls/catamarans there, too - guess it's because it is "rougher" there? I don't have any experience to compare double w single hulls...
 
Did anyone else check out this thing at the Victoria boat show last weekend?! Very interesting design. Like a lot of New Zealand style designs. The truly impressive part was the fact that the Cuddy extended all the way under the whole deck and would be perfect for sleeping. Love or hate it....this certainly stood out from the crowd.
http://www.mcncanada.com/
http://www.mcncanada.com/

I climbed into it after going to the gym, it was locked so couldn't check out the cuddy. I can't figure out why someone on the west coast would build a wet deck and the walk through gunnels. Ideal for Australia, maybe but the gaps are too small for a diver to get though. Will adding doors to the gunnels help it sell?
 
I looked at this boat as the Victoria boat show - pretty strange layout above and below deck. Seems like a patrol style boat that needs more design work to make it practical for sport fishing IMO.
 
Did anyone else check out this thing at the Victoria boat show last weekend?! Very interesting design. Like a lot of New Zealand style designs. The truly impressive part was the fact that the Cuddy extended all the way under the whole deck and would be perfect for sleeping. Love or hate it....this certainly stood out from the crowd.
http://www.mcncanada.com/
http://www.mcncanada.com/
They're doing something different, which is interesting.

I'm not going to say it's my thing but I respect guys who go in a new direction and who's to say that the third or fourth iteration doesn't end up as graceful as it is functional?

And while as a recreational boater I get to concern myself with "graceful", if I were an institutional buyer, I'd be exclusively concerned with function. I've gotten organizations to buy stuff in the past purely by appealing to concerns about occupational safety claims about hearing loss. Sometimes it comes down to a really mundane factor that the individual buyer doesn't even factor in.

That said, topsides are the only part of a boat which, in my experience, don't need graceful lines. And even then, when you drive the bow into a big cresting wave, there's something to be said for lines which appeal to the traditional eye. I've crammed a few boats hard into waves that couldn't be avoided, and in the process, sometimes noticed that smooth, clean, classic lines cope well with being driven into several tons of moving water.
 
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