FRP to Ferro
Mr Roosa is right, and there were many, many pits dug in backyards and filled with ferro 'projects' back in the hayday of home-built ferro-cement yachts in this country.However, not true in New Zealand, lotta seaworthy ferro yachts there, they are insured, but they have many wood yachts too, these are all insured, and it is not easy to insure a wood yacht here in the U.S. but, like a ferro, they can be insured.When talking ferro vessels there are two factors that reading rsponses I don't see...1) the 'armature' 2) the history. The history, with pictures showing the actual building, the armature framing, and all other aspects come into play.I have seen some pretty fair examples, and one that circumnavigated in the early sixties. She had a full logged and photographed history of when she was built, plus a scrap book of magazine, newspaper and articles of her round the globe trip.Now most of youse guyse shy away from wood too, when FRP first hit the market it was a suspicious material too, but light-weight and strong it is a fine material with it's own problems.Ferro is heavy, the biggest negative, but so is steel. The navys of the world don't use ferro, but neither do they use glass...A lotta buildings made out of cement, they do all right, no body is critiquing them...;-)