Intentar ORO - Gratis
How To Build A Superyacht
How It Works
|Issue 114
We go behind the scenes at Sunseeker’s factory in Poole to learn how some of the world’s most impressive luxury yachts are built

Superyachts are the essence of luxury. They offer uninterrupted panoramic views of the ocean, state-of-the-art technology and a seemingly effortless capacity to cruise through the water. But behind the gleaming hull and polished wooden floors, a complex array of plywood and fibreglass houses thousands of metres of electric cables, powerful engines and computer systems. All of this is the result of an incredible engineering and design process – a product of hundreds of thousands of construction hours.
Sunseeker International is world renowned for dominating the luxury yacht industry. Famed for their bespoke products, they carry designs through from the first conversations with the clients, transforming ideas and sketches into computer-generated schematics before constructing and handcrafting the entire vessel within a couple of months.
Sunseeker’s giant factory in Poole in the UK is spread across several shipyards, with the process working on an assembly line. The factory is impressive, but there is a noticeable lack of large machinery across the manufacturing line for the company’s 116 and 131 Yachts. Instead, the factory is bustling with people who work on painting, fitting components and laying out wires. Our guide is Matt Francis, one of the on-site general managers, who explains the lack of machinery.
“You can get machines for these things. You can get spray guns for fibreglass, instead of rolling these sheets. But you’d have to change the settings for every boat, so it works better by hand. That’s why almost everything you can see is hand built.”
Esta historia es de la edición Issue 114 de How It Works.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE How It Works

How It Works UK
UNCANNY'S DANNY ROBINS
The creator and host of the BBC's Uncanny series tells us about his most chilling experiences while researching the show, and writing a ghost book for children
4 mins
Issue 208

How It Works UK
HOW FEATHERS GROW
A bird's proteinaceous plumage comes from the same source as our hair
1 mins
Issue 208

How It Works UK
New EV battery technology could power 500-mile road trips on a 12-minute charge
Scientists have used a neat chemistry trick to tackle a major challenge facing future batteries.
2 mins
Issue 208

How It Works UK
HOW AIR PURIFIERS WORK
These filtration devices clean a room's air of particles that can make a person sick
1 min
Issue 208

How It Works UK
Chinese scientists hunt for alien radio signals in a 'potentially habitable' star system
TRAPPIST-1 is a red dwarf star located about 40 light years away that hosts seven Earth-sized rocky planets, with at least three orbiting in the habitable zone where liquid water could exist.
2 mins
Issue 208

How It Works UK
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN WE DIE?
Our bodies are vessels for life, but in death they undergo a cascade of chemical and biological changes
3 mins
Issue 208

How It Works UK
WHY ARE KEYBOARDS QWERTY?
There's a reason why this seemingly random arrangement of letters is widely used on keyboard layouts
1 min
Issue 208

How It Works UK
A 'quasi-moon' discovered in Earth orbit may have been hiding for decades
A new paper describes a possible 'quasi-moon' of Earth, an interloping asteroid that may have been following our planet around for decades, undetected.
1 mins
Issue 208

How It Works UK
WHAT'S AN ANTI-DRONE GUN?
How these devices intercept and disable unmanned aerial vehicles
1 mins
Issue 208

How It Works UK
Dozens of mysterious blobs discovered inside Mars may be 'failed planets'
Giant impact structures, including the potential remains of ancient ‘protoplanets’, may be lurking deep beneath the surface of Mars.
2 mins
Issue 208
Translate
Change font size