Your analogy supports my contention!
An inept or inexperienced carpenter can't build a house with the best hammer in the world (and may cause serious injury)A good carpenter will make a choice of the most suitable hammer for the carpenter's preferences and for the requirements of the job from among dozens of designs varying from good to superb quality, usually factoring in price and budget considerations. A good carpenter can get the job done with an inferior product***if forced to***.Interestingly enough, I have worked for carpenters in my youth and make Colonial reproduction furniture as a hobby and occasional avocation. I suspect that I have more than a dozen hammers in my shop.To carry your analogy a bit further. You don't want to frame a house with a tack hammer and you don't need a 20 ounce claw hammer to hang molding (though you could). If I were asked to recommend a hammer for a novice to take on the first day of work, it would be a Stanley 16 oz. framing hammer. Cheap, good forged head, solid handle, decent balance, decent milling on the face and serviceable for a wide variety of tasks. It would get the novice through until experience and specialization dictated other choices. As a serviceable hammer, a healthy part of the cost could be recouped when replacing it (of course, a hammer is cheap enough to keep whereas a sailboat usually isn't).In the case of a sailor aspiring to blue water cruising with little experience, a sturdy well maintained Behuntalina would be a good start until the more experience choice could be made.If I have made erroneous assumption about the experience of the original poster, apologies are extended (but you could of asked what is our preferred or favorite BWC...still a can of worms...heheheh... just a more homogeneous breed)