I love the H34
Not sure I understand. Is it your idea that you can make a 'one size fits many' kind of product? I don't think anything outsold the H34 in the Hunter line. At least in boats over 30 feet. Heck there are almost 700 in the Owner's Directory.
Ed, you are correct. We make a sheet material that has seams to simulate planks. It glues down one sheet at a time. The nexus of this company is how long fiberglass boats are lasting and how nice some of them look. In the old days if a wooden boat was 20 -30 years old it was often done with. A lot of them were run up on the beach and burned. Now the fiberglass boats are lasting 20-30 years as almost a norm with a little TLC.
I found one of the major problem with a boat retrofit is making the deck look nice. A few years ago I purchased a CSY 44 sailboat and began my typical overdoing a rebuild. Everything on the boat was solid but the deck looked terrible. Having rebuilt several boats including a H34, I was not looking forward to fixing and then redoing the nonskid. I studied a number of decking systems (plastic teak, other cork solutions, rubberized paint, and the good old Awlgrip with nonskid in it) and none of them seem to fit what I wanted.
After several years of research and LOTs of testing (my background is product development) we developed our decking. I went out and purchased a large format CNC router so we can replicate the pattern once we have it into the computer. Since these boats were built from molds a H34 kit should fit 'almost' any H34 that was made (unless they changed the mold.
It makes an older production boat look custom!
Anyone know how many H34s there were? Also, what about the larger (H36 etc) boats? Do they share the same cockpit, etc.?
I have included a couple of pictures showing the sheets laid out. In the picture where the pieces are laid on the parking lot you can see the starboard side of the bow has not been cut with the lines. The picture with the deck dry fitted on the boat shows how the sheets come together.