My thought is the owners of Lagoon 450’s need to thank Parley for putting this issue forward and finally got the maker to own up. A shout out to Parley for their documentation and professional communication
Hey Dummy's, when you buy a hurricane damaged, sunk, wasted boat maybe, just maybe that boat is trash and stressed beyond engineering specs. Maybe.... Poor Colin. Ah boo hoo.
How is ignoring the issue until it blew up on social media "doing the right thing"? 3 year warranty is a joke, they should have fixed all 450s - no exceptions. Instead of looking for every way out on a case by case basis. You would expect a cat to last 30 plus years, the residual value it compromised. This probably would have still been cheaper for them than the loss in value to owners and loss of confidence and sales to themselves.
Thanks for sharing. When I was in the market for a new boat, this stuff was coming out. So, I took a hard pass on Lagoon - not because I thought the boat was going to fall apart on me - I rejected the Lagoon because of how they handled it and tried to blame the owners. That was enough to take them out of consideration. I’m astonished that anyone would buy from them if they were reasonably informed about how they handled this.
There's a reason why Leopard and other manufacturers use steel cross beams connecting the two hulls. Beneteau/Lagoon opted for wood/fiberglass even for the beams, this being a less expensive construction option! Its not just the bulkheads but the beams that are cracking as well.
The funny thing is that the outcome of engineering a boat using mathematics and physics does not produce lies. A customer who's looking at a $50,000 repair bill for their negligence may lie. I side with the engineers.
They are right, this is a toy boat, not suitable for prolonged ocean voyages. On the other the other hand, it has all the amenities you got used to in your condo, so it will be easier to talk your wife into it. Don`t try to play Jaques Coustoux or Bernard Moitessier in one of these, tho 🤣
@@thinkcasting3182 The thing is we have countless examples of engineers getting it wrong and failures ensuing. This is another example of that and Beneteau has admitted as much.
If you watch the Parley you tube videos, there are a shit ton of other problems as well. The keels were barley glued on as well.. The Lagoon boats have some serious quality problems and there is NO way I would even get on one of those floating turds..
Remember Parley Revival’s boat was a hurricane wreck! Rebuilt by an amateur boatbuilder, a super yacht mechanic. They also massively over tightened their rig , admitted and documented in their video. While the problem is real Parley R is a special case.
@@CheersWarren That has nothing to doe with the crappy keel attachment. And this is NOT an isolated incident. As a building contractor charging $500 k for a project with this lack of quality I would be sued out of existence. As Lagoon should be..
@@CheersWarren What is your point? A huge percentage of well cared for Lagoons have the same problem, why single one out, that may have had some added cause, but you don't know if it was already falling apart before the cyclone. All we have to remember, is that every one of this model is going to fall apart.
Having watched all the Parlay Revival videos....being a Marine Surveyor for 20+ years....having built a Cat....when I saw the sloppy tabbing of bulkheads to the hull...sloppy fiberglass work with tons of filler to fill large gaps and bad fitting bulkheads I almost threw my shoe at the screen!!!....no wonder these have been failing , shawdy workmanship and use of excess brittle fillers blew me away....expensive yachts of various makers must be looked at BEHIND the fancy facades that you fall in love with....in most it is shocking just how rough and unfinished they are where you can't see!! So when shopping around look under...behind...many places in the boat....What you can't see is really telling about the boats overall construction.....cheers ....SV Archangel laying Thom's Place AK
I started watching Parlay Revival just before they found the problems. I watched their ordeal. I remember another Lagoon model having some similar probs. It's been a while so I can't remember which model and never saw anything other than a couple mentions - could have been different. I recommend all catamaran owners watching the videos of finding the probs and repairs just so you understand things to look for. Parlay is going across the Pacific now or may be across.
@@MrBobVick Zingaro filmed a short sail of a lagoon 50 and that cat was popping, groaning, creaking and banging so much, i wondered how could anyone get any sleep under way. It was LOUD.
I watched the Parlay Revival videos and when this problem happened Lagoon didn't want to know about it if I remember right. It was only because Colin was/is a Chief engineer that he and Jamie with bucketloads of sweat and tears fixed their boat.
BS Beneteau designed, sold, and collected profits on a defective design. They stonewalled the owners until they eventually had so much bad publicity that they had to deal with it. Their fix still leaves owner to do the labor or pay for the labor to be done. Every Lagoon 450 should be recalled and repaired at 100% Beneteaus expense to include $ for every day the boat is out of service. One less sailboat company could make a difference let them sink into another has been company. You either back your product or disappear and good riddance.
As I have reported on a few other Lagoon related channels, I owned a Lagoon 470 way back. It was one of the last ever made, and one year old when i bought it. It had hardly been used, 50 hours on the engine if I recall. It was my first boat, and at the start I loved it, but as time went on and we experienced different sea conditions it started to make and more importantly the wife nervous. The first worrying issues was the noise in anything but millpond conditions, it creaked and groaned horribly. It also slammed but not as I found out as badly as some. Then the cracks started appearing in the gelcoat, mostly where the superstructure joined the hulls. We had this fixed, then next bit of rough seas they all came back. We came across other owners where the salon windows were starting to pop out, and one 500 owner who had small mounds of wood shavings, after crossing the Atlantic where the wood fixtures meet the hull. When more cracks started appearing around the salon windows I called it day and sold it. I just felt at the time it was flexing was excessive. I went on to buy and older Beneteau monohull. It's 20 years old now and still going strong. I do keep a close eye on potential points of failure just in case.
I know nothing about sailboats, I cannot sail, and I really don't intend to ever sail or buy a sailboat. yet here I am, watching a bunch of your videos. I started out with fiberglass repair and ended here somehow. Point being, you make good videos, my friend. Keep up the hard work! Interesting stuff, these sailboats.
Thank you for having dealt with the topic that affects the Lagoon 450 but probably also other "Condomarans"... I have been racing on small cats since the early 70s and I am well aware of the enormous forces that affect the structure of catamarans . I was fortunate enough to know the designers of the first Catanas personally and they were well aware of the problems they might encounter. I've done many miles cruising with those Catanas and I know very well that the feeling of safety they instill with a stiff breeze can push you to overdo the sail area. It is unacceptable that such an obvious defect comes to light only thanks to the WEB. Lagoon will lose many points in the market as a luxury brand, trust is everything! Too bad, some models were very successful...
@@Themarriedbachelor Hi Rob, the expression "condomarans" is not mine (video @02:27) but I've taken it up again with pleasure as it ironically illustrates this type of catamaran (which I don't like at all!).
There are 50+ foot Lagoon problems as well, the owners are just keen to hide it for fear of stigma and lost resale values. If your 60' Lagoon Catamaran is keeping you awake with squeaking and cracking on passage or in heavy mooring waves, you have a bulkhead issue. I've seen them in RUclips videos as well. There is no serious creaking on a properly repaired catamaran.
I spent years repairing Lagoon (and other) catamarans in Tahiti and Panama. The brand name says it all: Keep her inside the lagoon, better yet, in the marina to prevent it from falling apart. Poor choice for someone planning on keeping a boat for the long run, it`s best to purchase one fairly new, then sell it to the next cruiser after following Jimmy Cornell`s route around the world.
Dude, i must have spent a year of my life trying to adjust the steering cable tensions on these pieces of crap, the hulls flex so much that if you adjust the tension correctly in port, the pulleys will rip off the bulkheads during the next passage with large swells. The Volvo Penta toy engines they install in them start leaking oil very quickly, the sail-drives are falling apart after 2 years of use. Now they have yanmars installed, but they often get damaged by seawater leaking over them from the crappy engine room hatches and poorly designed ventilation. The fuel system is adequate for north american and EU ports, but there is no provision to deal with contaminated fuel, you got a tiny diaphragm pump trying to suck the fuel through a 10mm hose from 25 ft The salon plexiglass windows are almost impossible to properly seal because of the excessive flexing. The false keels are held into the hull by sikaflex sealant, they tend to fall out randomly. It is a shame that these boats even managed to get the USCG and CE certifications....
I can't say enough how much I appreciate that you were not only thorough in this, especially leaving resources for people to go deeper, but you were very balanced about it, no unwarranted bashing of a company this is doing far more than most would in trying to make things right for their owners. Also making it clear, as many others have not, is that a far as we know, this issue is restricted to one model over several years. I also think it is extremely likely that future Lagoon buyers will greatly benefit as it seems certain that the company is learning some valuable engineering lessons from this that they'll be able to put to use in current and future production!
@9:37 Or repetitive tensioning of the rigging while the bulkheads slowly failed. This is a problem that creeped up on folks. Its like putting air in a tire with a slow leak. BTW this video is very fair and square about the issue. I still want a Lagoon 52F or a Lagoon 50. Don't care!
While they are breaking I believe that youtube Parlay had bought a totaled out catamaran so that why they found more and more damage in the other bulkheads. Just my opinion but its an educated one. Love your channel and the one you made about minimums for Bahamas cruising was well made. I found myself having a lot more than the bare minimum and it made me feel a lot more secure. I was worrying about “can I or should I attempt this?” Thank you
I'm shocked that lagoon still have a resale value! Don't people know by now? The cabinets are screwed together with steel screws that rushed immediately. It must be hard to get them insured
Those mass produced catamarans rarely have proper ring frames and compression posts, which could request 100 + layers of unidirectional glass/carbon and they are more build for marinas and floating around instead of sailing. It helps to consult an expert also when buying a new cat.
As a cat owner/designer/builder with 30k miles on my handmade boat I can say you can't make a 45' cat that weighs 38000 lbs and expect a ply bulkhead to survive. This is especially true when these monsters try to pound to windward either under sail or power. The are poor excuses for boats, everything done wrong.
Very good report! You´re always staying objective! My first thought while whatching: is this a general construction failure of all Lagoon cats and did it just come to light because the 45 footer is one of the most selling beside the 42?
You should have added, that Beneteau's have hull delamination problems, and huge voids in the lamination of the bulkheads, so the company is a failure.
Colin of the Revival is the Ralph Nader of catamarans. Bravo to him. Take any flaw buy a big manufacturer and it goes like this: deny, deny, blame others, blame owner, accept some blame, admit problem. Boeing for example. The NFL on concussions example. Auto recalls etc etc
It's not just the 45s that have quality issues. After chartering a 52 with many issues, the charter base manager confided that the 52s specifically have had numerous issues. I love the brand and I hope they resolve the production quality issues by the time I'm ready to buy in a few years. But it appears they have sacrificed quality for profit.
I have a catamaran. Every few years I have it lifted out for antifoul etc. Last time it was lifted there was a Lagoon lifted right after me. The Lagoon delaminated some bulkheads as it was being lifted. My boat was absolutely fine.
Lagoon do supply a fix but the stainless steel brace kit they offer is flawed - more extensive measures are needed to fully secure the 450's as the stresses simply transfer to other structural areas which will, in time, also fail.
I watch Parley, and Lady K... Eh? So... when you going to do a sailing trip/video again? I watched every moment of your trip down the ICW from Canada, and loved it.. and I learned a lot from your videos. I do not yet own a boat with a sail, but am working on it.. problem is, I need it to fit on the Rideau Canal... Mast height/draft are an issue, but I am hopeful!
Many years ago I owned a Lagoon 47. Loved the speed and roomy, comfortable lalyout BUT the first time I checked a thru hull valve the whole valve and housing turned and I found myself questioning its overall integrity. Both my previous mono hulls (C&C 48/Mason 54) were proven hard weather boats, a reality any serious sailor has to occasionally face. Wud not trust the Lagoon in a Nor'easter.
great and timely video, but i have 3 lingering questions 1. what about 450s built after 2019 - why are they not susceptible (or are they)? 2. what is Lagoon doing as far as design changes to ensure this will never happen again - none of the other builders are affected - some like Leopard i believe insert metal beams to reinforce. 3. why other Lagoon models are not susceptible - their dealer told me its all about over-tightened rigging - BS! Until Lagoon comes clean on these 3 questions given what transpired (and i hear they are very quiet about it) they will not restore their reputation, at least not in my eyes. I was planning to get one, but now my confidence is shaken. Turned my attention toward FPs since.
There are documents by Lagoon online describing the changes to bulkhead construction over time. They knew there was an issue and made changes to try to address the problem...
Sailing Parlay Revival Bought a hurricane repair 450. He found the bulkheads and made it public. They skimped big time on their bulkheads to save $1500 per boat. 1000 boats means they saved $1,500,000 but made them dangerous and unsafe. They said if you sail them in calm weather and seas you wont have a problem. LMAO really storms will come and you need a boat that can handle them. Also high winds come out of nowhere and again your boat needs to give you time to adjust sails not break.
I remember being on a friends 450 and thinking the fit and finish was terrible for such a new and expensive boat because the sliding door did not close properly and some doors would pop open . Never chartered lightly used boat . Now in hindsight I realize the bulkhead was busted . Lucky for him he sold it not knowing about it before this all blew up .
Great video! Been a while since I’ve been able to sit down and watch some. I was wondering about this subject though, thanks for the clarity! From: Beaver Island, Lake Michigan.
Having a Lagoon 440, the first evidence of this design flaw shows up there on the port side of the boat as well. I'm getting ready to haul and fix that this fall/winter. My guess is when they extended the 440 to 450, they failed to take into account the extra width of the boat and so it shows up more there. I've never been inside a 440 that did not have the visible part of the port cabin door surround broken. I've always assumed it was because that was the next place in the boat to absorb that extra stress. My boat makes lots of noise even when sitting at anchor so we'll be pulling pieces out to secure them with fiberglass and stop the excess squeaking. I know they won't be helping with my repairs but luckily I'm in Mexico where the labor is cheap.
you have another vlog on this - show bulkheads on lagoon / seawind / hh / mumby / leopard and the portafino 52 bulkheads and that boat will only flex 1" over its entire 52 foot
4:29 this is incorrect description of what is happening the hulls are not distorting but rather when the rigging is really tight it puts more stress on the transverse bulkheads splaying the hulls apart from each other. Rough seas magnify the issue to the bulkheads fail in compression. 12:33 I would not call it a design defect per se, but rather using incorrect and substandard materials in the construction. They NEVER should have used polyester resin and that cheap plywood in the construction of the bulkheads. Epoxy and heavier weight glass and broader tabbing and they never would have had an issue. Bean counters pared down to much the cost of materials and sacrifice of quality.
I'm really sad that Lagoons have such a bad reputation because, in my opinion, they're the best looking cats out there. They are the only ones that don't look like a damn spaceship. I'm partial to "traditional" boat designs such as trawlers, etc.
Straight up, there's no way I would buy a Lagoon or a benateau, harsh maybe, Very maybe, but a company that is prepared to argue with it's clients rather than simply fix the problem, is not a company I want to give my hard earned $ to. Nor put my family at risk of injury or worse, if the vessel imploded.🤣🇦🇺😲
A young 40' Beneteau owner in the local anchorage here of Mexico discovered the structural bottom grid of his keel boat had broken free from the hull and had to rebuild it himself in the Sea of Cortez. The photo's of the work looked brutal. Parley was parked next to me and Colin said bulkheads are fixed which should be reassuring as they are now crossing the Pacific.
@seawench I would like to reply to your comments regarding "you would never buy a Beneteau " we have a 34 ' limited edition 2011 launch. At NO TIME did we feel unsafe whilst travelling the Western Australian coast. I can tell you, we had 6 serious storms that tested both the crew and the boat. Trying to get to a safe anchorage in 50+ 73 gusts, is very tiring, but we dropped anchor and waited 2 days of wind and rain. After a 4 month jaunt we headed home, with No issues whatsoever about the integrity of our boat. She loves the strong conditions and we usually set the boat at 40/30 deg and I love how she gets in the groove at 32 degrees and she will virtually sail itself. The weather can be very unpredictable on the west coast, and the seas can change in minutes. We are 75 and 77 years of age and go out for a sail ⛵ in all sorts of weather in our VERY SAFE BENETEAU. HAPPY SAILING to all oldies and remember, never give up
When you watch Parlay (and others) it is not just the bulkheads, once they start digging they often find allsorts of quality control issues. My guess is that the engineers did their calculations and finite stress analysis with the assumption of good to perfect manufacturing. For a number of years Lagoon could not produce boats fast enough to meet the demand and quality was allowed to slip.
I think trimarans are the perfect sailing vessel. Fast, roomy, super tough. The center hull can handle the sail shrouds, and provide motor/engine drive, while the amas provide stability and LOTS of additional space. Also, a faster boat is a safer boat, when you're running away from danger, and into safety.
I literally grew up on a 1999 Catalina 36 Mark two I really enjoyed it my dad passed away when I was fifteen and I'm looking at buying another sailboat right now I'm on the Great Lakes our boat was Whitehall Michigan our first but was a Catalina 27 Morgan I remember the day my dad bought that Catalina 36 part two brand-new I was 7 but I was a kid I used to race those small butterfly sailing boats then when I was in my teens and twenties I moved to the Jays
I think they used 7ply for the bulkheads and glue not tabbed - see parlay revival and david shih for the problem and rebuild - both of these boats are now solid as
Actually a truss frame sandwiched between ply surfaces glassed both sides and securely glassed to all contact surfaces is the correct way to build this bulkhead. Anything else is not going to work long term.
Their you go I'm a Brit that wants to know what my cousin across the sea is sailing this season, And with all our great Nations outputs of the Best seakeeping vessels in the world you mentioned the F word, I must admit to love racing Beneteau yacht's in the Med But I've won regattas in the Med with Moody 31 Yachts back in the 1980's against light weight F kit, not surprised to find Profit making is making a comeback to Cause of death of those that go down to the sea again,
I wouldn't purchase any boat produced by Groupe Beneteau. This problem isn't confined to the 450 either. There is only one Lagoon worth buying today, and that is Colin's Parlay.
I recall reading, back in the late 60s/early 70s that flexing was a big drawback to oceangoing catamarans. Of course fiberglass construction was not as sophisticated as it is now. However material and labor costs are not what they were back then either. So all that to say, I'm not surprised.
What suprise me is that lagoon has not came out to defend there reputation. They have not said what they are doing to change. The design changes needed to prevent this from happening to new yachts.
Love your vids unfortunately I can't afford to support as I have low income and paying my Catalina 34 .I do have hope to sail it to Europe from pacific mexico.i would love to see episode of how to make Catalina 34 safe for crossing Atlantic or similar boat.i am sure many production boat owners would like that
@12:39 Screw the Bulkheads for a moment. Like said. They literally sail like a brick. So if you love sailing for the sailing. Lagoon is the worst choice you can make. Never ever buy a lagoon. Ist ultimatively frustrating to sail this crap.
A freind had a Lagoon 450 . Great dock cottage and very comfortable . Sails like shit . I remember thinking it odd the sliding door did not fit right and such . He sold it before all this blew up and looking back it too was broke . So bad the door did not close right . Knowing the boat , the factory fixes are not really strong enough either to be honest .
Thanks for Another great video man. And hope you don’t mind me saying, But for Anyone interested, Sailing Parlay Revival goes very deep into this. He bought a damaged 450 and ended up discovering later the bulkhead issues. Many great episodes on the repairs as well as dealing with Lagoon. Both entertaining and informative. This channel and theirs are quite literally the only ones I’ve seen every episode and look forward to the new ones. Worth checking out. **EDIT- Nevermind lol… Just got to the point where you recommended it yourself… I should’ve known you were on it 🤦🏼♂️😁.
You have a lot of company, it would appear many people comment prior to watching video. It seems peculiar to me, but thanks for explaining all the strange comments.
Looking to buy a Lagoon 450, it is much more than bulkheads deformation. Decks are not glued, bulkhead not glued to the hulls, doors not sliding, crazy crackling while under sail, just plain bad workmanship. Problems impossible to spot in a normal survey. I would never touch a 450 with a 70 foot pole. One would have to budget a large amount of $$$ just for probable fixes and repairs, yes "PROBABLE".
I am but a watcher of sailing on YT, not a sailing person myself - so, my "expertise" is accordingly weak. However, I do have some thoughts: If a problem arises (to me that is: 3 or more independent similar cases, no matter how high the number of boats, or whatever the product is, built), a company should FIRST inquire about the facts and only THEN look for excuses outside their responsibility. So, for me no absolving here. Considering all the forces working on a two-hull boat mentioned in the video, it does baffle me slightly that, even with a flydeck on top, those boats are just made of plywood! The repair kit seems to have some metal involved. I'd say: high time! Notwithstanding environmental concerns, it is my belief that for stability's sake, either more fiber/resin or some more metal components need to be installed here, to give the necessary strength.
Can you show the difference between other mass produced cats like Leopard? Are the bulk heads too small? Are they in the wrong location? I would be interested in a marine architects opinion as well. Thank you for your great videos!
I don't think Lagoon did the right thing. Parlay spoke about the "kit" and it sounded more like a patch, than a real fix. Yes the patch "might" make things better but it's not a real fix, IMO. I was also shocked at the flimsiness of the bulkheads! What looks like a half inch plywood with two small support pieces, seems "mickey mouse" on a yacht that is supposed to be rugged enough to go around the world!
I'm more artist than engineer and I am just shocked by this design. I don't need math to know the forces are intense and this is the obvious stress point in these designs. The older?, homemade? trimaran next to me just came back from trying to cross the Pacific because his hull has a 4 inch crack. As these boats are clearly not built for speed they should be built more stout.
@6:12 "We what the boat was intended to do". See that's the main issue I think. Lagoons were never made for bluewater crossings. They may be marketet as such but that's fake. They ain't what they propose to be. They were originally designed by interieur designers so that's where the saying comes from that they build the boat around the curtains. At one point the interieur designers interrupted the boat engineers and said that they can't build the boat like that because they need the space for their idea. From that point on they build the engine compartment in a way so that the rudder is in front of the prop. Like WTF. People need to stop thinking about blue water crossings when they think about Lagoon. All they are good for is hanging around in bays while chartering. But getting from bay to bay. That's already a struggle for these boats.
Lagoon didn't "do the right thing" until there was massive pressure on them. There are still other people with brand new boats with major flaws that Lagoon simply refuse to do anything about. When a builder has to be forced to do the right thing, you can never trust them again. In this case Lagoon "doing the right thing" is simply part of their PR budget, not any indication of any principles.
I'm a 69r old Brit motor-mechanic, we were Tech college trained(City & guilds)in my day, I myself hold passes with credits, on a few end of year exams, Monocoque construction in the Brit Motor Ind. has been around for a few years by the time I left education, and went hands on, British Leyland, produced a small 4seat family car called the Allegro, this car was the first ever road car built, with a full Monocoque body construction, I was a BL, tech at a main dealer in Britain when problems started to filter through the dealerships, Urgent Warnings, Cease and desist notices I think you Yanks call them, Car doors only to be opened with all four wheels in full contact with the ground, I see Chinese quality, in these pics,
My thought is the owners of Lagoon 450’s need to thank Parley for putting this issue forward and finally got the maker to own up. A shout out to Parley for their documentation and professional communication
Totally agree. Parlay Revival put their balls on the line to carry this issue. Same either David Shih. Both have channels on YT.
Actually - Sailing Nahoa were the first whistleblowers to document this on RUclips
Hey Dummy's, when you buy a hurricane damaged, sunk, wasted boat maybe, just maybe that boat is trash and stressed beyond engineering specs. Maybe.... Poor Colin. Ah boo hoo.
Wouldn't buy one for half the price...............sloppy hidden workmanship !!!
@@aaronp1434
Nahoa is not a Lagoon 450.
How is ignoring the issue until it blew up on social media "doing the right thing"?
3 year warranty is a joke, they should have fixed all 450s - no exceptions. Instead of looking for every way out on a case by case basis. You would expect a cat to last 30 plus years, the residual value it compromised.
This probably would have still been cheaper for them than the loss in value to owners and loss of confidence and sales to themselves.
Thanks for sharing. When I was in the market for a new boat, this stuff was coming out. So, I took a hard pass on Lagoon - not because I thought the boat was going to fall apart on me - I rejected the Lagoon because of how they handled it and tried to blame the owners. That was enough to take them out of consideration. I’m astonished that anyone would buy from them if they were reasonably informed about how they handled this.
There's a reason why Leopard and other manufacturers use steel cross beams connecting the two hulls. Beneteau/Lagoon opted for wood/fiberglass even for the beams, this being a less expensive construction option! Its not just the bulkheads but the beams that are cracking as well.
Lagoon backtracked after everybody went nuts. They were blaming owners and everyone but themselves but the power of the internet prevailed.
The funny thing is that the outcome of engineering a boat using mathematics and physics does not produce lies. A customer who's looking at a $50,000 repair bill for their negligence may lie. I side with the engineers.
@@thinkcasting3182 right, because engineers are all the same and have the same values.
They are right, this is a toy boat, not suitable for prolonged ocean voyages. On the other the other hand, it has all the amenities you got used to in your condo, so it will be easier to talk your wife into it. Don`t try to play Jaques Coustoux or Bernard Moitessier in one of these, tho 🤣
@@thinkcasting3182 The thing is we have countless examples of engineers getting it wrong and failures ensuing. This is another example of that and Beneteau has admitted as much.
Blamed OWNERS for their INADEQUITE CONSTRUCTION....I'd be ashamed if I were them!
If you watch the Parley you tube videos, there are a shit ton of other problems as well. The keels were barley glued on as well.. The Lagoon boats have some serious quality problems and there is NO way I would even get on one of those floating turds..
Same goes for the crap built Beneteaus.
@@grancitodos7318 Same company, same policy...
Remember Parley Revival’s boat was a hurricane wreck!
Rebuilt by an amateur boatbuilder, a super yacht mechanic.
They also massively over tightened their rig , admitted and documented in their video. While the problem is real Parley R is a special case.
@@CheersWarren That has nothing to doe with the crappy keel attachment. And this is NOT an isolated incident. As a building contractor charging $500 k for a project with this lack of quality I would be sued out of existence. As Lagoon should be..
@@CheersWarren What is your point? A huge percentage of well cared for Lagoons have the same problem, why single one out, that may have had some added cause, but you don't know if it was already falling apart before the cyclone. All we have to remember, is that every one of this model is going to fall apart.
Having watched all the Parlay Revival videos....being a Marine Surveyor for 20+ years....having built a Cat....when I saw the sloppy tabbing of bulkheads to the hull...sloppy fiberglass work with tons of filler to fill large gaps and bad fitting bulkheads I almost threw my shoe at the screen!!!....no wonder these have been failing , shawdy workmanship and use of excess brittle fillers blew me away....expensive yachts of various makers must be looked at BEHIND the fancy facades that you fall in love with....in most it is shocking just how rough and unfinished they are where you can't see!! So when shopping around look under...behind...many places in the boat....What you can't see is really telling about the boats overall construction.....cheers ....SV Archangel laying Thom's Place AK
Agree. Is there a catamaran that you would recommend more than others?
I started watching Parlay Revival just before they found the problems. I watched their ordeal. I remember another Lagoon model having some similar probs. It's been a while so I can't remember which model and never saw anything other than a couple mentions - could have been different. I recommend all catamaran owners watching the videos of finding the probs and repairs just so you understand things to look for.
Parlay is going across the Pacific now or may be across.
Noaha (sp) is a L 410 they had issues with a aft midship bulk head, but that could have been from water intrusion in the deckhouse.
@@MrBobVick Zingaro filmed a short sail of a lagoon 50 and that cat was popping, groaning, creaking and banging so much, i wondered how could anyone get any sleep under way. It was LOUD.
I watched the Parlay Revival videos and when this problem happened Lagoon didn't want to know about it if I remember right. It was only because Colin was/is a Chief engineer that he and Jamie with bucketloads of sweat and tears fixed their boat.
Not ignoring the problem but you have to remember Parley was a write off, You know smashed with all sorts of structural issues from the hurricane.
BS
Beneteau designed, sold, and collected profits on a defective design. They stonewalled the owners until they eventually had so much bad publicity that they had to deal with it. Their fix still leaves owner to do the labor or pay for the labor to be done.
Every Lagoon 450 should be recalled and repaired at 100% Beneteaus expense to include $ for every day the boat is out of service.
One less sailboat company could make a difference let them sink into another has been company. You either back your product or disappear and good riddance.
If there's one thing I know from watching Jim's channel its that he'd be a great dude to have brew with in the anchorage.
As I have reported on a few other Lagoon related channels, I owned a Lagoon 470 way back. It was one of the last ever made, and one year old when i bought it. It had hardly been used, 50 hours on the engine if I recall.
It was my first boat, and at the start I loved it, but as time went on and we experienced different sea conditions it started to make and more importantly the wife nervous. The first worrying issues was the noise in anything but millpond conditions, it creaked and groaned horribly. It also slammed but not as I found out as badly as some.
Then the cracks started appearing in the gelcoat, mostly where the superstructure joined the hulls. We had this fixed, then next bit of rough seas they all came back. We came across other owners where the salon windows were starting to pop out, and one 500 owner who had small mounds of wood shavings, after crossing the Atlantic where the wood fixtures meet the hull.
When more cracks started appearing around the salon windows I called it day and sold it. I just felt at the time it was flexing was excessive.
I went on to buy and older Beneteau monohull. It's 20 years old now and still going strong. I do keep a close eye on potential points of failure just in case.
Oh boy, this sounds like a brand wide problem then, not good, but good to know.
@@seandelaney1700 Worse than that, if you search further there were similar issues with another French cat brand some years back.
I know nothing about sailboats, I cannot sail, and I really don't intend to ever sail or buy a sailboat. yet here I am, watching a bunch of your videos. I started out with fiberglass repair and ended here somehow. Point being, you make good videos, my friend. Keep up the hard work! Interesting stuff, these sailboats.
Lagoon only owned up when they had no choice at all and if you have an older one they reserve the right to blame you for their factory defect .
Thank you for having dealt with the topic that affects the Lagoon 450 but probably also other "Condomarans"... I have been racing on small cats since the early 70s and I am well aware of the enormous forces that affect the structure of catamarans . I was fortunate enough to know the designers of the first Catanas personally and they were well aware of the problems they might encounter. I've done many miles cruising with those Catanas and I know very well that the feeling of safety they instill with a stiff breeze can push you to overdo the sail area. It is unacceptable that such an obvious defect comes to light only thanks to the WEB. Lagoon will lose many points in the market as a luxury brand, trust is everything! Too bad, some models were very successful...
Hey, is that a typo or did you intentionally call them condomarans ? Lol
I like it. 👍
@@Themarriedbachelor Hi Rob, the expression "condomarans" is not mine (video @02:27) but I've taken it up again with pleasure as it ironically illustrates this type of catamaran (which I don't like at all!).
Not a serious boat but a great party show off boat when new. Good renter in contained area.
There are 50+ foot Lagoon problems as well, the owners are just keen to hide it for fear of stigma and lost resale values. If your 60' Lagoon Catamaran is keeping you awake with squeaking and cracking on passage or in heavy mooring waves, you have a bulkhead issue.
I've seen them in RUclips videos as well.
There is no serious creaking on a properly repaired catamaran.
Agreed the 52s have numerous issues as well, add a charter base manager informed me. It seems overall production quality issues.
I spent years repairing Lagoon (and other) catamarans in Tahiti and Panama. The brand name says it all: Keep her inside the lagoon, better yet, in the marina to prevent it from falling apart. Poor choice for someone planning on keeping a boat for the long run, it`s best to purchase one fairly new, then sell it to the next cruiser after following Jimmy Cornell`s route around the world.
Sir, you are mistaken…more models than the 450 are being effected. If you did read all the comments in the 450 bulkhead group…you’d have seen that.
It is NOT only the 450 that has issues
other models also have bulk head issues
Dude, i must have spent a year of my life trying to adjust the steering cable tensions on these pieces of crap, the hulls flex so much that if you adjust the tension correctly in port, the pulleys will rip off the bulkheads during the next passage with large swells. The Volvo Penta toy engines they install in them start leaking oil very quickly, the sail-drives are falling apart after 2 years of use. Now they have yanmars installed, but they often get damaged by seawater leaking over them from the crappy engine room hatches and poorly designed ventilation. The fuel system is adequate for north american and EU ports, but there is no provision to deal with contaminated fuel, you got a tiny diaphragm pump trying to suck the fuel through a 10mm hose from 25 ft The salon plexiglass windows are almost impossible to properly seal because of the excessive flexing. The false keels are held into the hull by sikaflex sealant, they tend to fall out randomly. It is a shame that these boats even managed to get the USCG and CE certifications....
@@sentenced2sail So you love the boats?
I can't say enough how much I appreciate that you were not only thorough in this, especially leaving resources for people to go deeper, but you were very balanced about it, no unwarranted bashing of a company this is doing far more than most would in trying to make things right for their owners. Also making it clear, as many others have not, is that a far as we know, this issue is restricted to one model over several years.
I also think it is extremely likely that future Lagoon buyers will greatly benefit as it seems certain that the company is learning some valuable engineering lessons from this that they'll be able to put to use in current and future production!
@9:37 Or repetitive tensioning of the rigging while the bulkheads slowly failed. This is a problem that creeped up on folks. Its like putting air in a tire with a slow leak. BTW this video is very fair and square about the issue. I still want a Lagoon 52F or a Lagoon 50. Don't care!
Very fair video. I appreciate your in-site on this matter. You keep things grounded in reality.
While they are breaking I believe that youtube Parlay had bought a totaled out catamaran so that why they found more and more damage in the other bulkheads. Just my opinion but its an educated one. Love your channel and the one you made about minimums for Bahamas cruising was well made. I found myself having a lot more than the bare minimum and it made me feel a lot more secure. I was worrying about “can I or should I attempt this?” Thank you
I'm shocked that lagoon still have a resale value! Don't people know by now? The cabinets are screwed together with steel screws that rushed immediately. It must be hard to get them insured
The Lagoon 380 hasn't had the bulkhead issues, or pad eye issue. Plus an integrated keel. Certified for every ocean. 😀
Those mass produced catamarans rarely have proper ring frames and compression posts, which could request 100 + layers of unidirectional glass/carbon and they are more build for marinas and floating around instead of sailing. It helps to consult an expert also when buying a new cat.
Thanks again!
Great topic Tim! Would love a follow up about which construction is stronger and which manufacturers are doing it the right way. Cheers!
As a cat owner/designer/builder with 30k miles on my handmade boat I can say you can't make a 45' cat that weighs 38000 lbs and expect a ply bulkhead to survive. This is especially true when these monsters try to pound to windward either under sail or power. The are poor excuses for boats, everything done wrong.
What were the differences in design specifically addressing the bulkhead issue between the 440 and the 450?
Very good report! You´re always staying objective!
My first thought while whatching: is this a general construction failure of all Lagoon cats and did it just come to light because the 45 footer is one of the most selling beside the 42?
You should have added, that Beneteau's have hull delamination problems, and huge voids in the lamination of the bulkheads, so the company is a failure.
Awesome reflections on the situation! As always, stay safe out there!
Colin of the Revival is the Ralph Nader of catamarans. Bravo to him. Take any flaw buy a big manufacturer and it goes like this: deny, deny, blame others, blame owner, accept some blame, admit problem. Boeing for example. The NFL on concussions example. Auto recalls etc etc
It's not just the 45s that have quality issues. After chartering a 52 with many issues, the charter base manager confided that the 52s specifically have had numerous issues. I love the brand and I hope they resolve the production quality issues by the time I'm ready to buy in a few years. But it appears they have sacrificed quality for profit.
Always current and relevant info thanx mate
Very informative
Thx!
I have a catamaran. Every few years I have it lifted out for antifoul etc. Last time it was lifted there was a Lagoon lifted right after me. The Lagoon delaminated some bulkheads as it was being lifted. My boat was absolutely fine.
What sort of cat do you have? Age?
Hi Tim, For aircraft we say 'Keep the dirty side down and the pointy end forward'.
Lagoon do supply a fix but the stainless steel brace kit they offer is flawed - more extensive measures are needed to fully secure the 450's as the stresses simply transfer to other structural areas which will, in time, also fail.
A fair shake to Lagoon. Good episode and thanks again.
I watch Parley, and Lady K... Eh? So... when you going to do a sailing trip/video again? I watched every moment of your trip down the ICW from Canada, and loved it.. and I learned a lot from your videos. I do not yet own a boat with a sail, but am working on it.. problem is, I need it to fit on the Rideau Canal... Mast height/draft are an issue, but I am hopeful!
Many years ago I owned a Lagoon 47. Loved the speed and roomy, comfortable lalyout BUT the first time I checked a thru hull valve the whole valve and housing turned and I found myself questioning its overall integrity. Both my previous mono hulls (C&C 48/Mason 54) were proven hard weather boats, a reality any serious sailor has to occasionally face. Wud not trust the Lagoon in a Nor'easter.
Balanced argument. Nice.
Ive seen this problem on a 52 also.
Nice video
The picture of the 440 you first show I noticed is my boat, except the name has changed after we bought her 2 years ago
great and timely video, but i have 3 lingering questions
1. what about 450s built after 2019 - why are they not susceptible (or are they)?
2. what is Lagoon doing as far as design changes to ensure this will never happen again - none of the other builders are affected - some like Leopard i believe insert metal beams to reinforce.
3. why other Lagoon models are not susceptible - their dealer told me its all about over-tightened rigging - BS!
Until Lagoon comes clean on these 3 questions given what transpired (and i hear they are very quiet about it) they will not restore their reputation, at least not in my eyes. I was planning to get one, but now my confidence is shaken. Turned my attention toward FPs since.
There are documents by Lagoon online describing the changes to bulkhead construction over time. They knew there was an issue and made changes to try to address the problem...
@@URLWer do you have the link handy by any chance? thx!
Sailing Parlay Revival Bought a hurricane repair 450. He found the bulkheads and made it public. They skimped big time on their bulkheads to save $1500 per boat. 1000 boats means they saved $1,500,000 but made them dangerous and unsafe. They said if you sail them in calm weather and seas you wont have a problem. LMAO really storms will come and you need a boat that can handle them. Also high winds come out of nowhere and again your boat needs to give you time to adjust sails not break.
I remember being on a friends 450 and thinking the fit and finish was terrible for such a new and expensive boat because the sliding door did not close properly and some doors would pop open . Never chartered lightly used boat .
Now in hindsight I realize the bulkhead was busted . Lucky for him he sold it not knowing about it before this all blew up .
Great video! Been a while since I’ve been able to sit down and watch some.
I was wondering about this subject though, thanks for the clarity!
From: Beaver Island, Lake Michigan.
Having a Lagoon 440, the first evidence of this design flaw shows up there on the port side of the boat as well. I'm getting ready to haul and fix that this fall/winter. My guess is when they extended the 440 to 450, they failed to take into account the extra width of the boat and so it shows up more there. I've never been inside a 440 that did not have the visible part of the port cabin door surround broken. I've always assumed it was because that was the next place in the boat to absorb that extra stress. My boat makes lots of noise even when sitting at anchor so we'll be pulling pieces out to secure them with fiberglass and stop the excess squeaking. I know they won't be helping with my repairs but luckily I'm in Mexico where the labor is cheap.
Parley was a hurricane damaged boat when Colin bought it. He took the risk.
The 410 has a problem as well.
Great video. I wish you would do some videos on budget older cats.
you have another vlog on this - show bulkheads on lagoon / seawind / hh / mumby / leopard and the portafino 52 bulkheads and that boat will only flex 1" over its entire 52 foot
Interesting
4:29 this is incorrect description of what is happening the hulls are not distorting but rather when the rigging is really tight it puts more stress on the transverse bulkheads splaying the hulls apart from each other. Rough seas magnify the issue to the bulkheads fail in compression.
12:33 I would not call it a design defect per se, but rather using incorrect and substandard materials in the construction. They NEVER should have used polyester resin and that cheap plywood in the construction of the bulkheads. Epoxy and heavier weight glass and broader tabbing and they never would have had an issue. Bean counters pared down to much the cost of materials and sacrifice of quality.
This comment 💯
I'm really sad that Lagoons have such a bad reputation because, in my opinion, they're the best looking cats out there. They are the only ones that don't look like a damn spaceship. I'm partial to "traditional" boat designs such as trawlers, etc.
Straight up, there's no way I would buy a Lagoon or a benateau, harsh maybe, Very maybe, but a company that is prepared to argue with it's clients rather than simply fix the problem, is not a company I want to give my hard earned $ to. Nor put my family at risk of injury or worse, if the vessel imploded.🤣🇦🇺😲
A young 40' Beneteau owner in the local anchorage here of Mexico discovered the structural bottom grid of his keel boat had broken free from the hull and had to rebuild it himself in the Sea of Cortez. The photo's of the work looked brutal. Parley was parked next to me and Colin said bulkheads are fixed which should be reassuring as they are now crossing the Pacific.
@@seandelaney1700 Wow Sean that's hectic, so bloody dangerous!!!
Good luck in trying to find one company that doesn’t conduct business in this manner
@seawench I would like to reply to your comments regarding "you would never buy a Beneteau " we have a 34 ' limited edition 2011 launch. At NO TIME did we feel unsafe whilst travelling the Western Australian coast. I can tell you, we had 6 serious storms that tested both the crew and the boat. Trying to get to a safe anchorage in 50+ 73 gusts, is very tiring, but we dropped anchor and waited 2 days of wind and rain. After a 4 month jaunt we headed home, with No issues whatsoever about the integrity of our boat.
She loves the strong conditions and we usually set the boat at 40/30 deg and I love how she gets in the groove at 32 degrees and she will virtually sail itself.
The weather can be very unpredictable on the west coast, and the seas can change in minutes.
We are 75 and 77 years of age and go out for a sail ⛵ in all sorts of weather in our VERY SAFE BENETEAU.
HAPPY SAILING to all oldies and remember, never give up
Always worrying when a main strength member on a half million dollar boat is made of plywood.
When you watch Parlay (and others) it is not just the bulkheads, once they start digging they often find allsorts of quality control issues. My guess is that the engineers did their calculations and finite stress analysis with the assumption of good to perfect manufacturing. For a number of years Lagoon could not produce boats fast enough to meet the demand and quality was allowed to slip.
Hey been missing you. Glad ur back. But who cares about boats with training wheels.
It's not just Lagoon. Perhaps it would be more productive to name the cats that dont have stress induced issues.
remember the word bulkhead.... I quite literally Laghed Out Loud!!!
No Kidding! How would anyone think a 3/4" piece of plywood was strong enough!
@@johnmcphee7004
so was the fix kit just sending shims, hammering them in, and glass them over?
I think trimarans are the perfect sailing vessel. Fast, roomy, super tough. The center hull can handle the sail shrouds, and provide motor/engine drive, while the amas provide stability and LOTS of additional space. Also, a faster boat is a safer boat, when you're running away from danger, and into safety.
I literally grew up on a 1999 Catalina 36 Mark two I really enjoyed it my dad passed away when I was fifteen and I'm looking at buying another sailboat right now I'm on the Great Lakes our boat was Whitehall Michigan our first but was a Catalina 27 Morgan I remember the day my dad bought that Catalina 36 part two brand-new I was 7 but I was a kid I used to race those small butterfly sailing boats then when I was in my teens and twenties I moved to the Jays
The bulkhead only looks glassed on the edges at 3:25 .Maybe if they glasssed the whole bulkead it wouldnt have been an issue?
I think they used 7ply for the bulkheads and glue not tabbed - see parlay revival and david shih for the problem and rebuild - both of these boats are now solid as
@@jimlofts5433 yeah i would think reinforcing it would fix it. Just a pain getting in there. At least it can be fixed.
@@jimlofts5433 It just boggles the mind that untabbed boats are sold to go offshore.
Actually a truss frame sandwiched between ply surfaces glassed both sides and securely glassed to all contact surfaces is the correct way to build this bulkhead. Anything else is not going to work long term.
"still Safe" and "no mast problems" ?
Parlay was about to cross Pacific, then the rigging suddenly went slack.
Their you go I'm a Brit that wants to know what my cousin across the sea is sailing this season, And with all our great Nations outputs of the Best seakeeping vessels in the world you mentioned the F word, I must admit to love racing Beneteau yacht's in the Med But I've won regattas in the Med with Moody 31 Yachts back in the 1980's against light weight F kit, not surprised to find Profit making is making a comeback to Cause of death of those that go down to the sea again,
I wouldn't purchase any boat produced by Groupe Beneteau. This problem isn't confined to the 450 either. There is only one Lagoon worth buying today, and that is Colin's Parlay.
Are you going to go sailing? Parlay documented this issue a year ago, along with bad tabbing of the remaining bulkhead issues!
I recall reading, back in the late 60s/early 70s that flexing was a big drawback to oceangoing catamarans. Of course fiberglass construction was not as sophisticated as it is now. However material and labor costs are not what they were back then either. So all that to say, I'm not surprised.
What suprise me is that lagoon has not came out to defend there reputation.
They have not said what they are doing to change. The design changes needed to prevent this from happening to new yachts.
Love your vids unfortunately I can't afford to support as I have low income and paying my Catalina 34 .I do have hope to sail it to Europe from pacific mexico.i would love to see episode of how to make Catalina 34 safe for crossing Atlantic or similar boat.i am sure many production boat owners would like that
@12:39 Screw the Bulkheads for a moment. Like said. They literally sail like a brick. So if you love sailing for the sailing. Lagoon is the worst choice you can make. Never ever buy a lagoon. Ist ultimatively frustrating to sail this crap.
"...and like me, she's built for comfort" 😂
A freind had a Lagoon 450 . Great dock cottage and very comfortable . Sails like shit .
I remember thinking it odd the sliding door did not fit right and such . He sold it before all this blew up and looking back it too was broke . So bad the door did not close right .
Knowing the boat , the factory fixes are not really strong enough either to be honest .
Thanks for Another great video man. And hope you don’t mind me saying, But for Anyone interested, Sailing Parlay Revival goes very deep into this. He bought a damaged 450 and ended up discovering later the bulkhead issues. Many great episodes on the repairs as well as dealing with Lagoon. Both entertaining and informative. This channel and theirs are quite literally the only ones I’ve seen every episode and look forward to the new ones. Worth checking out.
**EDIT- Nevermind lol… Just got to the point where you recommended it yourself… I should’ve known you were on it 🤦🏼♂️😁.
You have a lot of company, it would appear many people comment prior to watching video. It seems peculiar to me, but thanks for explaining all the strange comments.
Looking to buy a Lagoon 450, it is much more than bulkheads deformation. Decks are not glued, bulkhead not glued to the hulls, doors not sliding, crazy crackling while under sail, just plain bad workmanship. Problems impossible to spot in a normal survey. I would never touch a 450 with a 70 foot pole. One would have to budget a large amount of $$$ just for probable fixes and repairs, yes "PROBABLE".
I am but a watcher of sailing on YT, not a sailing person myself - so, my "expertise" is accordingly weak. However, I do have some thoughts:
If a problem arises (to me that is: 3 or more independent similar cases, no matter how high the number of boats, or whatever the product is, built), a company should FIRST inquire about the facts and only THEN look for excuses outside their responsibility. So, for me no absolving here.
Considering all the forces working on a two-hull boat mentioned in the video, it does baffle me slightly that, even with a flydeck on top, those boats are just made of plywood! The repair kit seems to have some metal involved. I'd say: high time!
Notwithstanding environmental concerns, it is my belief that for stability's sake, either more fiber/resin or some more metal components need to be installed here, to give the necessary strength.
memo to self ... never buy a lagoon ... and to be extra safe stay away from beneteaux ... thx
AAAH Hestia and the Anzac bridge Sydney
Catamarans dont take big chopped up waves well, they get torqued corner to corner too much, and rip apart.
What kind of crap catamaran are you talking about, those built in back yards from plywood, 70 years ago? Get a more recent education.
Only the heavy poorly built ones. Follow the three L's, long lean light.
@@robertgeorge9909 , I would rather go with the 3 S's.....Strong, Stable, and Seaworthy.
@@SIC-SEMPER-TYRANNIS There have been catamarans built like that for more than 45 years, and they out live this modern high priced cheap crap.
Can you show the difference between other mass produced cats like Leopard? Are the bulk heads too small? Are they in the wrong location? I would be interested in a marine architects opinion as well. Thank you for your great videos!
I don't think Lagoon did the right thing. Parlay spoke about the "kit" and it sounded more like a patch, than a real fix. Yes the patch "might" make things better but it's not a real fix, IMO. I was also shocked at the flimsiness of the bulkheads! What looks like a half inch plywood with two small support pieces, seems "mickey mouse" on a yacht that is supposed to be rugged enough to go around the world!
I'm more artist than engineer and I am just shocked by this design. I don't need math to know the forces are intense and this is the obvious stress point in these designs. The older?, homemade? trimaran next to me just came back from trying to cross the Pacific because his hull has a 4 inch crack. As these boats are clearly not built for speed they should be built more stout.
@6:12 "We what the boat was intended to do". See that's the main issue I think. Lagoons were never made for bluewater crossings. They may be marketet as such but that's fake. They ain't what they propose to be. They were originally designed by interieur designers so that's where the saying comes from that they build the boat around the curtains. At one point the interieur designers interrupted the boat engineers and said that they can't build the boat like that because they need the space for their idea. From that point on they build the engine compartment in a way so that the rudder is in front of the prop. Like WTF. People need to stop thinking about blue water crossings when they think about Lagoon. All they are good for is hanging around in bays while chartering. But getting from bay to bay. That's already a struggle for these boats.
Is the repair kit an upgraded, beefed up repair or just replacement of the original design?
If you can't handle the truth than stay away from people that throw stones!
Why don't the other Lagoon models have the same problem? What are the differences in the designs that prevent bulkhead fractures?
It appears lagoon took a few short cuts to save on money.
The question is : is this a repair or a fix? I.e is it a flaw in the design issue or a materials failure issue?
Lagoon didn't "do the right thing" until there was massive pressure on them. There are still other people with brand new boats with major flaws that Lagoon simply refuse to do anything about. When a builder has to be forced to do the right thing, you can never trust them again. In this case Lagoon "doing the right thing" is simply part of their PR budget, not any indication of any principles.
All this just makes me like Wharrams more if I go with a catamaran for my next boat.
Yup! A well built Wharram is the way to go with Cats. IMO
Will you take a look at Leopard?
The name Lagoon says where you can sail only. It doesn't say ocean like Oceanis etc. :)
Or like Sunreef 😃
@@evgenyzak2035 it's like when one hits the reef and then sits on it on the sun.
Please can you consider doing an indepth review of the hunter 49 and hunter 50cc. Pros & Cons compared to European equivalents 🙏
I'm a 69r old Brit motor-mechanic, we were Tech college trained(City & guilds)in my day, I myself hold passes with credits, on a few end of year exams, Monocoque construction in the Brit Motor Ind. has been around for a few years by the time I left education, and went hands on, British Leyland, produced a small 4seat family car called the Allegro, this car was the first ever road car built, with a full Monocoque body construction, I was a BL, tech at a main dealer in Britain when problems started to filter through the dealerships, Urgent Warnings, Cease and desist notices I think you Yanks call them, Car doors only to be opened with all four wheels in full contact with the ground, I see Chinese quality, in these pics,