Brought back so many good memories. Many years ago, as a team player, I was a woodworker on the sailing yacht, "Dust Em" built in San Diego for Dennis Conners, The Americas Cup Winner. It was 46', all wooden hull. From the lumber truck delivering the raw wood, to what a feeling it was to see it lowered into the water and to go sailing on it in the San Diego Bay. Enjoy your years building Yachts, you will be able to look back on those years with a since of pride. I know I do.
@@marineman2298 Doesn't have to be a big boat to be mindblowing ;) Look up some of Johan Anker's boats. The man is an absolute god of the yacht design world
I pleased that rich people have enough money to have wooden boats of this quality built so that people with all of the necessary skills to build such a boat can remain employed so that those skills don't disappear. They are precious beyond belief.
well said for i was a loss for words, Am a cabinetmaker of thirty-five years owned a Glen L 25ft plywood hull when i was young got me into woodworking, truly thought that skill was gone, warms my heart to see it live on!
What a great video. Thank you for making this available for our viewing pleasure. Having owned several sailboats I can tell you that this is one of the nicest sailboats I have ever seen. All the pleasures of owning a wood boat with the maintenance of a fiberglass boat. The best of both worlds. An incredible boat that sails like a dream.
I love this method, a great way to weld together the best of wood and the best of glass. To see it under sail however showed perfect design on all points. That downwind shot really made my day.
I Use to watch my grandfather work on rowboats when I was a kid. His full-time job was working at the shipyard for Bethlehem Steel. He didn't use any glass or epoxy it was all wood, putty, and brass screws... With lots of paint..lol 16 and 20 ft row boats were beautiful pieces of art. Building a sailboat like this it's not only a beautiful work of art but a great piece of architecture. You guys are amazing Craftsman. I see the skills in your hands as I did in my grandfather's. Thanks for sharing.
This vid showing up completely brightened my day. Nothing even comes close in compare to wood and a group of people able to work together, and great to see that it still happens.
My grandfather was a master boat builder from a time long gone. He built many schooners which we called floaters and I used to marvel at his skill. This video is an integration of old/new technologies and fine craftsmanship. The end result is truly a masterpiece. What I wouldn't give to sail her & explore. Dream on.
Love this video. No lies. No deception. Noone trying to sell you something, or trying to talk you out of your hard earned pay, just good old fashioned honest work. But I'd sure like to buy that boat.
Wonderful to see such craftmanship so alive and well. I make furniture and think a set of dovetailed drawers is a lot of work! This is mind blowing. Such a beautiful finished piece and thanks for sharing. Cheers from Aust - Dave PS. I don't think these guys are "Extreme Fast" - they take their time and do the job properly. :-)
@@orbodman That certainly makes things difficult. As I've made built-ins for our house I have concluded that it must have been built before the discovery of the right angle! It certainly does make things much harder. Cheers - Dave
Magnificent! I almost don't want to see it in the water. Truly a work of craftmanship a work of art. I'm jelly of you guys who worked on her what a dream job.
Jeff S for those that grew up sailing ⛵️ and watching that beauty been built. What a beautiful work and skills. And just imagining the smell of wood in the air
Beautifull... i did the same process with my dad on a 10ft boat ( except the vacuum) almost 40years ago...my dad's not here anymore ..but the process remind my all the hard work and the itchy fiberglass ...still...........good memories.
Awesoeme. The pride of having worked on that boat! It is one thing to be a great shipwright when that was the norm, it is another to be at top form when such skills are a rarity.
This is a lovely example of old techniques modernized. Traditionally wooden boats were hard on maintenance. Modern glues and fiberglass allow the same look with much better durability. Was that liquid nails I saw going on there? If I had the money this is the boat I'd buy.
Seems like you all work together well, and are proud of what you do. That's what we all need more of. Also do you test all the boats out before delivery?
The guy who uploaded this didn't work anything on the boat. Just took the footage, added some music (hear at the end) and profits from others achievements.
@@MediaStudio88 and he didn't charge us anything, let us admire the skills and talent at work, let us see a whole process normally hidden....um...what exactly has he profited that we didn't?
Would love to know the basic details: How many people and how many hours to build, weight, cost to build vs value, where was it built, what materials used, etc.
Wow right down to cut plywood strips hundreds to make the frame to the side of the boat then 3-5 layers of wood and plastic and fiberglass after. Lot of work
That was my 1st reaction too also with the epoxy but on reflection a few counter considerations .A)These guys obviously know what they are doing B) I bet it gets the cost down otherwise I suspect more wood and labour would be required. C) lower cost means more sales which helps keep the tradition alive both for the wood working skills and the boat design. D) There is some comfort in knowing its full beauty can be seen internally.
Yes Gizmo, me too. As one who spent his formative years as a traditional boat builder, there is little I recognise here. The main question is, how would one go about repairing such a hull if it were ever breached? Scrappage would be my guess.
@@gav2759 It's actually easier to fix a breach in this type of hull then it is in a wooden planked hull. There's pro's and con's to both methods. Laminated wood hulls with fiberglass canvas over it, makes for a stronger and lighter hull with the benefits of a easier construction and much easier to maintain. It's not really about competing with wood, after all there's plenty of wood above the waterline and inside where you see it. You got to admit it's a beautiful boat. It's like comparing a log cabin to a framed house, both have there appeal, costs and associated skills with construction.
What beautiful craftsmanship. It’s becoming a lost art. Nothing rides like a timber boat I was hoping they wouldn’t glass it but I understand why it had to be done. Great video I wish I was there building with you.
i guess you didnt look at the same video all the wood was glued together with cab-o-sil and epoxy and the hull was rolled with mats of polyester and resin. this build is just a "stick and glue" method of boat building i sure hope these boats aint expensive because it isn't going to last as a real wooden ship
Guys its a different time and a different era so we build boats differently from then till now. It's still great to see fine craftsmen at work, a suburb job and Kudo's for all involved. sailing is my second greatest love, you can only imagine what is my first. Thanks for the great entertainment. I have lived and worked in one of the great boat building and history of sailing areas in the world. Mystic Ct.in the US of A. The home of the greatest collection of Sailing pictures those of Morris and Stanley Rosenfeld housed in a repository at Mystic Seaport of which I had a hand. An era of great wealth.
хорошая работа, оптимальный подбор технологий и материалов при изготовление корпуса яхты , дружный коллектив и великолепный результат . семь футов под килем вашей лодке и вашей команде . Ваш фильм - моя мечта.
Watching this the first time was such a pleasant experience that I had to watch a second time. Not to sound redundant, but what a great video. If I buy a lottery ticket, and win, you can bet this will be on my bucket list. I could sit and marvel about the quality and workmanship for hours, then to actually take it sailing. What a great experience.
@@bicyclist2 yeah, people say "go to college for a well paying job" kids actually believe them and they wind up without anything all that valuable and no "well paying job".. then those same people are like, "why don't people get any actual skills" then trades are nearly all nepotism and licensing walls so none of these kids who are now adults with basically a home loan worth of non defaultable debt can't even get into these trades even if they wanted to.. all the while the same geezers pulling social security go, "well, you better pay back that student loan, us dupes that could go to college on a summer job and the university ponzi that is profiting a trillion dollars tricked you into getting! well maybe you shouldn't have trusted us, stupid kid lol"
Видео снято еще так как буд-то за один день играючи они это все сделали :) Команда конечно подобралась четкая. Жаль не понять сколько и как готовились материалы все которые учавствовали в постройке, сколько людей всего было задействовано.
Where she is sailing at 8:39 is where we scattered my grandfathers ashes. He built wooden boats at the Fairey marine yard on the Hamble, and also taught me to sail there.
Perhaps replace "talented" with "oriented" and consider the time and effort they've put into building these amazing skills. You could do it too if you were so inclined. :-)
This is a rip-off of someone else's work. The company was called Fairlie Yachts from the UK, they closed down back in 2015 or 2016. Might be under new ownership since the website is still up. The original video is called "Fairlie 55 video diary", look it up, its still here from the original film maker. This whole channel is a big Russian rip-off, it should be shut down. I tried to report this video but I'm not the owner of the video being stolen. Even the name 'Diresta' is stealing it's name from another popular You-Tube Maker channel.
Quel merveilleux travail d'équipe pour une réalisation parfaite félicitations et merci à l'heureux propriétaire qui vous a donné les moyen de faire ce bijou
I'm amazed how much of this is done by hand. I figured this stuff would all just be CAD, then let loose lasers, water cutters, CNC machines, etc. and just puzzle fit it together. Instead, hand mortising going on everywhere with chisels, hand fairing the hull with giant sanding blocks, hand carving, and joinery on the hatches, etc. Great stuff, beautiful build. Nice to see. ;-)
sorry to say but you dont really understand the when to use and not use CAD, CNC and all the others you suggest. for a one off project like this those tools would greatly add to the cost in time and money.
@@traktorworks3200 Good point. I guess I really didn't think about this being a one-off. It wouldn't take too many copies being made, though, to invert that equation, and even for a one-off the hull, etc. would be more accurately shaped, though that probably doesn't matter either, for a boat like this. Not exactly made for the Americas Cup. ;-)
@@MrJdsenior to create a 3D model for each item, and remember that for this boat there maybe are thousands of items or parts would take an enormous amount of time and gived the cost of employing a CAD design person your overall cost wouuld be staggering. thats even before you factore in the cost of reverse engineering the data of each part...... just trying to cheer you up 😋😈😁🍓
@@traktorworks3200 Yes, but you can take the CAD CAM to any level you want. You wouldn't have to necessarily do everything in CAD, you could do say, just the hull, but since you're obviously not going to give an INCH in this discussion, I'll leave it at that. WAIT, no, no I won't. ;-) There WILL come a day where you will have to do NOTHING but "photo" the part and it will magically appear before you, given some time to print, etc. Not yet, but one day in the not too distant future, as some 3D printing/"scanning" stuff is ALREADY at that level. I know, it's not WOOD, yet. So, hate to burst your bubble , but prepare for it to be BURST, sooner than later. Yeah, yeah, I know, then the machine will be expensive...blah, blah, blah. Oh, and you WON'T need a programmer, AI will be doing it all for you, it can already do MANY tasks BETTER than humans, Chess, driving, Jeopardy, medical diagnosis, ping pong, etc., and will eventually do ALL of them better. I said before, and I'll say it again, there are cheap, quick, solutions for what we called CAD CAM out there, and they are getting cheaper and cheaper. Many (many many) tiny home grown maker labs and even non-professional individual tinkerers own and operate them every day. You would require professional size/capability stuff, obviously, but just sayin'. Not too long and people who absolutely refuse to "come into the present" will go the way of the dinosaur, except for small specialty markets that will cherish hand work, as MANY MANY hand tasks have done already. Not necessarily the best thing all round, but it WILL happen. And you yourself will most likely will be driving (and be driven BY) an electric car if you live another decade or two. Times are a'changin' my man. And my cheer is fine, thank you. Enjoying the repartee, as I did your build video, just trying to nudge you a bit (kicking and screaming, obviously) into the present, where you obviously don't want to be. I'm betting your tune will change, just a bit, sooner or later, as the tech becomes vastly less expensive and vastly more "user friendly". Eventually, though probably not in our lifetimes, there will be atom by atom replicators, star trek style, as they can already do atom by atom positioning in the lab. I'll be watchin', so if you EVER buy any "cheat hardware", hide it. ;-)
haha ...now i think your just trying to troll me if your going to go the full tilt, ie us A1, 3D printing then you are COMPLETLY getting away from the botd in your video and the use of CAD to manufacture THIS boat, which as i have said would have been a horrendous task. on the other hand if your going to manafucture a boat that best suits using all the newest geewiz wang-dang fancy pancy technoolgies then yes i agree it wold be a good road to go down. I could make my point another way. If the older boat could have beeb feasibly designed using CAD it probably most likely would have been. It wasnt as that technology, old design and CAD were anything bit a good match. However a boat manufacture from modern synthetic materials is well suited to be implemented using CAD and any of the ancillary tools. AS to "" but since you're obviously not going to give an INCH in this discussion, I'll leave it at that. WAIT, no, no I won't. ;-)"" just could not resist could you......so im quite sure you will troll me some more..... but im cool wityh that , thats the whey of the troll.......... @@MrJdsenior
It does my heart good to see men pick up their tools and create such a beautiful thing.
yes
Brought back so many good memories. Many years ago, as a team player, I was a woodworker on the sailing yacht, "Dust Em" built in San Diego for Dennis Conners, The Americas Cup Winner. It was 46', all wooden hull. From the lumber truck delivering the raw wood, to what a feeling it was to see it lowered into the water and to go sailing on it in the San Diego Bay. Enjoy your years building Yachts, you will be able to look back on those years with a since of pride. I know I do.
What a beautiful boat, and nice to see that craftsmen still exist to produce such craft. Just need to win the lottery now.
What a gorgeous boat, an insane amount of man hours and craftsmanship in that amazing boat.
Beautiful yes, excellent craftsmanship yes. A smaller boat really. Search UA-cam for some of the bigger builds. Mind blowing.
@@marineman2298 Doesn't have to be a big boat to be mindblowing ;) Look up some of Johan Anker's boats. The man is an absolute god of the yacht design world
I pleased that rich people have enough money to have wooden boats of this quality built so that people with all of the necessary skills to build such a boat can remain employed so that those skills don't disappear. They are precious beyond belief.
yes betsy devos would love it.
i must say i totaly agree with you there.Its great to see these skills are still alive and well.
well said for i was a loss for words, Am a cabinetmaker of thirty-five years owned a Glen L 25ft plywood hull when i was young got me into woodworking, truly thought that skill was gone, warms my heart to see it live on!
What a great video. Thank you for making this available for our viewing pleasure. Having owned several sailboats I can tell you that this is one of the nicest sailboats I have ever seen. All the pleasures of owning a wood boat with the maintenance of a fiberglass boat. The best of both worlds. An incredible boat that sails like a dream.
FYI your sound track at the end of the vid is jacked up, you've got two songs playing over each other. Great boat. Let's see a schooner!
I love this method, a great way to weld together the best of wood and the best of glass. To see it under sail however showed perfect design on all points. That downwind shot really made my day.
I Use to watch my grandfather work on rowboats when I was a kid. His full-time job was working at the shipyard for Bethlehem Steel. He didn't use any glass or epoxy it was all wood, putty, and brass screws... With lots of paint..lol 16 and 20 ft row boats were beautiful pieces of art. Building a sailboat like this it's not only a beautiful work of art but a great piece of architecture. You guys are amazing Craftsman. I see the skills in your hands as I did in my grandfather's. Thanks for sharing.
This vid showing up completely brightened my day. Nothing even comes close in compare to wood and a group of people able to work together, and great to see that it still happens.
Not many are made to this level of precision any more. Absolutely beautiful work.
I'm a master cabinetmaker. I've been doing it for more than 20 years. What these guys do takes immense skill. 07 gents!
hey Richard, do you have some pictures of your work? greets from germany buddy
@@CtotheOban Of course, everyone has their brag board!
Incredible, beautiful, strong! But disappointed they didn’t show inside
My grandfather was a master boat builder from a time long gone. He built many schooners which we called floaters and I used to marvel at his skill. This video is an integration of old/new technologies and fine craftsmanship. The end result is truly a masterpiece. What I wouldn't give to sail her & explore. Dream on.
It's amazing that this type of work is still being done - beautiful.
Love this video. No lies. No deception. Noone trying to sell you something, or trying to talk you out of your hard earned pay, just good old fashioned honest work. But I'd sure like to buy that boat.
Wonderful to see such craftmanship so alive and well. I make furniture and think a set of dovetailed drawers is a lot of work! This is mind blowing. Such a beautiful finished piece and thanks for sharing. Cheers from Aust - Dave PS. I don't think these guys are "Extreme Fast" - they take their time and do the job properly. :-)
Absolutely correct. But what makes it even more difficult is the fact that one rarely works with angles that are right angled.
@@orbodman That certainly makes things difficult. As I've made built-ins for our house I have concluded that it must have been built before the discovery of the right angle! It certainly does make things much harder. Cheers - Dave
@ZebsFrend You must be a microsurgeon with the world's smallest thicknesser! I would love to see your work.
That is a staggeringly beautiful boat, even more so when you see it was put together.
Magnificent! I almost don't want to see it in the water. Truly a work of craftmanship a work of art. I'm jelly of you guys who worked on her what a dream job.
Jeff S for those that grew up sailing ⛵️ and watching that beauty been built. What a beautiful work and skills. And just imagining the smell of wood in the air
Beautifull... i did the same process with my dad on a 10ft boat ( except the vacuum) almost 40years ago...my dad's not here anymore ..but the process remind my all the hard work and the itchy fiberglass ...still...........good memories.
Beautiful old new boat.
I hope those highly skilled woodworkers are allowed out of the shop often to try out what they make.
Just a little research on Google shows that the boat is a Fairlie 55 built just outside Southampton in the south of England.
According to Classic Boat test in 2012, £850,000.00.
Legend! Thank you! I was looking to see some information on this boat.
This Boat is an awesome piece of Art!
At some point you just have to say WOW!! Amazing design, craftsmanship, and execution!
I'm never gonna say "amazing design or craftsmanship"
That's an awful way to die.
WOW!! Amazing design, craftsmanship, and execution!
Awesoeme.
The pride of having worked on that boat!
It is one thing to be a great shipwright when that was the norm, it is another to be at top form when such skills are a rarity.
Pretty boat, but something went badly wrong with the music starting at 8:36
If I were a gazillionaire I'd much rather have a work of art like this than some big motorboat.
This is a lovely example of old techniques modernized. Traditionally wooden boats were hard on maintenance. Modern glues and fiberglass allow the same look with much better durability. Was that liquid nails I saw going on there? If I had the money this is the boat I'd buy.
Seems like you all work together well, and are proud of what you do. That's what we all need more of. Also do you test all the boats out before delivery?
The guy who uploaded this didn't work anything on the boat. Just took the footage, added some music (hear at the end) and profits from others achievements.
@@MediaStudio88 and he didn't charge us anything, let us admire the skills and talent at work, let us see a whole process normally hidden....um...what exactly has he profited that we didn't?
What a gorgeous boat. Too bad they covered up the beautiful wood grain. I love to sail. Thanks.
Would love to know the basic details: How many people and how many hours to build, weight, cost to build vs value, where was it built, what materials used, etc.
Same.
Wow right down to cut plywood strips hundreds to make the frame to the side of the boat then 3-5 layers of wood and plastic and fiberglass after. Lot of work
Hmmm I finally followed Robert's advice and took woodprix. It's great for beginners, and has some advanced stuff too.
Excellent choice Easter!
That's one fine craft..... I would love to own one just like it but bigger
It's so fashinating watching at these men tremedously skilled to create a beauty like this. That's why one-off boats are so expensive.
It slays me to see all that natural wood covered up with fiberglass.
no the paint is the real crime all that mahogany would still be seen under the fiberglass
That was my 1st reaction too also with the epoxy but on reflection a few counter considerations .A)These guys obviously know what they are doing B) I bet it gets the cost down otherwise I suspect more wood and labour would be required. C) lower cost means more sales which helps keep the tradition alive both for the wood working skills and the boat design. D) There is some comfort in knowing its full beauty can be seen internally.
Yes Gizmo, me too. As one who spent his formative years as a traditional boat builder, there is little I recognise here. The main question is, how would one go about repairing such a hull if it were ever breached? Scrappage would be my guess.
@@gav2759 that's what I was wondering. The hull is obviously hella strong but the elements can put a hole in anything.
@@gav2759 It's actually easier to fix a breach in this type of hull then it is in a wooden planked hull. There's pro's and con's to both methods. Laminated wood hulls with fiberglass canvas over it, makes for a stronger and lighter hull with the benefits of a easier construction and much easier to maintain. It's not really about competing with wood, after all there's plenty of wood above the waterline and inside where you see it. You got to admit it's a beautiful boat. It's like comparing a log cabin to a framed house, both have there appeal, costs and associated skills with construction.
Beautiful boat and fantastic craftsmanship.
Wonderful, great woodworking skills.
What beautiful craftsmanship. It’s becoming a lost art. Nothing rides like a timber boat I was hoping they wouldn’t glass it but I understand why it had to be done. Great video I wish I was there building with you.
beautifull ship, my dream sailing boat
Are there 2, possibly 3 sound tracks playing at the same time?
That'l fool youtubes audio copyrights.
This is one of the best boat making videos I have ever seen!
Great video. The audio mix at the end left a lot to be desired, but overall very inspiring.
A thing of great beauty. Thank God some folks still stay true to the non plastic/carbon boats!
i guess you didnt look at the same video all the wood was glued together with cab-o-sil and epoxy and the hull was rolled with mats of polyester and resin. this build is just a "stick and glue" method of boat building i sure hope these boats aint expensive because it isn't going to last as a real wooden ship
Какая красавица!👍
Обводы- чудо, инженерное искусство пополам с магией!
Che squadra di professionisti... traspira la passione per il mare ed il legno ...complimenti davvero a tutta la squadra..!!
Awesome video but the music selection was little hard to listen to.
Endlich mal jemand der mit traditionellen Materialien, aber modernen Abläufen und Technologien konstruiert. Sehr schön.
Who the heck would put a thumbs down on this beautiful video and why?
Some fiberglass @$$
so elegant lines.
Amazing skills, beautiful boat.
Man what a work of art - beautiful!
Què hermoso es verlos trabajar !! Los felicito !!
Impressive and gorgeous, cudos to the craftsmen and women that put together that beauty.
IN THE OLDEN DAYS THEY USED TO BUILD BOATS OUT OF PLASTIC - NOW THEY USE WOOD - IMAGINE THAT!
@Mos Kito
:^)
Congratulations for new family member
These are the cathedral builders of the sea. What a beautiful piece of art.
Guys its a different time and a different era so we build boats differently from then till now. It's still great to see fine craftsmen at work, a suburb job and Kudo's for all involved. sailing is my second greatest love, you can only imagine what is my first. Thanks for the great entertainment. I have lived and worked in one of the great boat building and history of sailing areas in the world. Mystic Ct.in the US of A. The home of the greatest collection of Sailing pictures those of Morris and Stanley Rosenfeld housed in a repository at Mystic Seaport of which I had a hand. An era of great wealth.
Glorious wood still the most beautiful boat building material on earth
These are phenomenal works of art.
A beautiful boat is like poetry in motion. And so is constructing it.
2 sound tracks playing at once near the end? did you not do a final check through before posting?
British craftmanship at it's best 👌
хорошая работа, оптимальный подбор технологий и материалов при изготовление корпуса яхты , дружный коллектив и великолепный результат . семь футов под килем вашей лодке и вашей команде . Ваш фильм - моя мечта.
you're right, I think
Watching this the first time was such a pleasant experience that I had to watch a second time. Not to sound redundant, but what a great video. If I buy a lottery ticket, and win, you can bet this will be on my bucket list. I could sit and marvel about the quality and workmanship for hours, then to actually take it sailing. What a great experience.
just imagine a catamaran built like this
More craftsman and less college grads.
Unfortunately you can't find anyone willing to train people to do this stuff. I've looked when I was much younger.
@@bicyclist2 yeah, people say "go to college for a well paying job"
kids actually believe them and they wind up without anything all that valuable and no "well paying job".. then those same people are like, "why don't people get any actual skills"
then trades are nearly all nepotism and licensing walls so none of these kids who are now adults with basically a home loan worth of non defaultable debt can't even get into these trades even if they wanted to.. all the while the same geezers pulling social security go, "well, you better pay back that student loan, us dupes that could go to college on a summer job and the university ponzi that is profiting a trillion dollars tricked you into getting! well maybe you shouldn't have trusted us, stupid kid lol"
You need the college grads to buy the stuff that craftsmen make. Believe me, I can't buy jack.
What a beautiful boat, and awesome display of skills and craftsmanship making her.
mesmerizing. it just gets better and better. outstanding construction. thanks for sharing.
I especially like the two soundtracks playing simultaneously - quite avant-garde.
Wow. Beautiful boat. Great teamwork.
YOUR VID WAS NICE BUT WHAT DRUG CRAZED PERSON MIXED IN THE MUSIC?
That"s what the mutant button is for.
PSA: Never press the mutant button. It rarely goes well.
The lines and craftsmanship of this boat are top notch. Hats off. Thanks for sharing
I should have been a banker.... and have the money for one of those. Beautiful in every detail.
could not help watching again. the perfectest thiing I have seen for a while. Would prefer it to a halberg rassy
Восхитительная вещь для тех кто умеет и любит ходить под парусами! Очень красивая и качественная яхта сделанная с любовью! И очень дорогая!)
what he said
Видео снято еще так как буд-то за один день играючи они это все сделали :) Команда конечно подобралась четкая.
Жаль не понять сколько и как готовились материалы все которые учавствовали в постройке, сколько людей всего было задействовано.
What a beautiful boat.
Where she is sailing at 8:39 is where we scattered my grandfathers ashes. He built wooden boats at the Fairey marine yard on the Hamble, and also taught me to sail there.
Simply said, Beautiful !
what a gorgeous boat!
Absolutely Beautiful,...... shame about the 2 types of music playing along with tbe video!!!!!!!!
Nice work!
Except...for the double music at the end.
Where did you find these talented men to build this boy? Outstanding!
Perhaps replace "talented" with "oriented" and consider the time and effort they've put into building these amazing skills. You could do it too if you were so inclined. :-)
My granddad was a carpenter and I admire your job.
BRITANIA RULES THE WAVES.......WHAT A BEAUTY
BRITANNIA
There are still hundreds of west system wooden boats sailing the carribean sea , some of them are 40+ years old.
Great boat!!
This actually brought me to tears, it's so beautiful.
you frikken wierdo
@@danieldavies4561 you betcha!
Beautiful boat!
But... I'm so poor....
Most Beautiful production craft sailboat EVERRRRRR!
Beautiful boat, nice video, horrible sound track.
You guys must go home every night with a great feeling of achievement, beautiful job
Wow, such a beauty.
ok so how much did this boat sell for? real curious how much this level of craftsmanship would cost...
This is a rip-off of someone else's work. The company was called Fairlie Yachts from the UK, they closed down back in 2015 or 2016. Might be under new ownership since the website is still up. The original video is called "Fairlie 55 video diary", look it up, its still here from the original film maker. This whole channel is a big Russian rip-off, it should be shut down. I tried to report this video but I'm not the owner of the video being stolen. Even the name 'Diresta' is stealing it's name from another popular You-Tube Maker channel.
Couldn't choose between two songs at the end, so you just used both?
Ha. I thought I had another video playing somewhere in another browser. Nope.
I thought I had another window playing as well! I thought I was going looney.
Gorgeous boat, pity about the dreadful soundtrack(s).
And the intrusive adverts......
Frigging GORGEOUS!!!!
It would be nice to see the inside of the boat.
Quel merveilleux travail d'équipe pour une réalisation parfaite félicitations et merci à l'heureux propriétaire qui vous a donné les moyen de faire ce bijou
I'm amazed how much of this is done by hand. I figured this stuff would all just be CAD, then let loose lasers, water cutters, CNC machines, etc. and just puzzle fit it together. Instead, hand mortising going on everywhere with chisels, hand fairing the hull with giant sanding blocks, hand carving, and joinery on the hatches, etc. Great stuff, beautiful build. Nice to see. ;-)
sorry to say but you dont really understand the when to use and not use CAD, CNC and all the others you suggest. for a one off project like this those tools would greatly add to the cost in time and money.
@@traktorworks3200 Good point. I guess I really didn't think about this being a one-off. It wouldn't take too many copies being made, though, to invert that equation, and even for a one-off the hull, etc. would be more accurately shaped, though that probably doesn't matter either, for a boat like this. Not exactly made for the Americas Cup. ;-)
@@MrJdsenior to create a 3D model for each item, and remember that for this boat there maybe are thousands of items or parts would take an enormous amount of time and gived the cost of employing a CAD design person your overall cost wouuld be staggering.
thats even before you factore in the cost of reverse engineering the data of each part......
just trying to cheer you up 😋😈😁🍓
@@traktorworks3200 Yes, but you can take the CAD CAM to any level you want. You wouldn't have to necessarily do everything in CAD, you could do say, just the hull, but since you're obviously not going to give an INCH in this discussion, I'll leave it at that. WAIT, no, no I won't. ;-)
There WILL come a day where you will have to do NOTHING but "photo" the part and it will magically appear before you, given some time to print, etc. Not yet, but one day in the not too distant future, as some 3D printing/"scanning" stuff is ALREADY at that level. I know, it's not WOOD, yet. So, hate to burst your bubble , but prepare for it to be BURST, sooner than later. Yeah, yeah, I know, then the machine will be expensive...blah, blah, blah. Oh, and you WON'T need a programmer, AI will be doing it all for you, it can already do MANY tasks BETTER than humans, Chess, driving, Jeopardy, medical diagnosis, ping pong, etc., and will eventually do ALL of them better.
I said before, and I'll say it again, there are cheap, quick, solutions for what we called CAD CAM out there, and they are getting cheaper and cheaper. Many (many many) tiny home grown maker labs and even non-professional individual tinkerers own and operate them every day. You would require professional size/capability stuff, obviously, but just sayin'.
Not too long and people who absolutely refuse to "come into the present" will go the way of the dinosaur, except for small specialty markets that will cherish hand work, as MANY MANY hand tasks have done already. Not necessarily the best thing all round, but it WILL happen. And you yourself will most likely will be driving (and be driven BY) an electric car if you live another decade or two. Times are a'changin' my man.
And my cheer is fine, thank you. Enjoying the repartee, as I did your build video, just trying to nudge you a bit (kicking and screaming, obviously) into the present, where you obviously don't want to be. I'm betting your tune will change, just a bit, sooner or later, as the tech becomes vastly less expensive and vastly more "user friendly". Eventually, though probably not in our lifetimes, there will be atom by atom replicators, star trek style, as they can already do atom by atom positioning in the lab. I'll be watchin', so if you EVER buy any "cheat hardware", hide it. ;-)
haha ...now i think your just trying to troll me
if your going to go the full tilt, ie us A1, 3D printing then you are COMPLETLY getting away from the botd in your video and the use of CAD to manufacture THIS boat, which as i have said would have been a horrendous task. on the other hand if your going to manafucture a boat that best suits using all the newest geewiz wang-dang fancy pancy technoolgies then yes i agree it wold be a good road to go down.
I could make my point another way. If the older boat could have beeb feasibly designed using CAD it probably most likely would have been. It wasnt as that technology, old design and CAD were anything bit a good match.
However a boat manufacture from modern synthetic materials is well suited to be implemented using CAD and any of the ancillary tools.
AS to
"" but since you're obviously not going to give an INCH in this discussion, I'll leave it at that. WAIT, no, no I won't. ;-)""
just could not resist could you......so im quite sure you will troll me some more.....
but im cool wityh that , thats the whey of the troll..........
@@MrJdsenior
Beautiful sail boat.
Absolutely beautiful build and yacht.
6:22 Really doesn't look like the cabin is going to fit over those bulkheads. They're way too tall, but at 6:25 it fits!