There are mainly three different methods of furniture making for yachts as on-site method, mock-up method and computerized method. On-site method is the oldest and traditional way which has been developed by old talented wooden boat builders. In fact, the method is still alive in many small boatyards where the artisans apply the techniques learned by their masters. Mock-up method separates the construction process into two: boat building and furniture making. Hull, bulkheads, engines installation, mechanical and electrical infrastructure, all are made by a boatyard and furnitures are made by a sub-contractor, which indicates the furniture making is a specialization. Computerized method is the advanced way, developed in the last decade. All furnitures are drawn phase by phase by the sub-contractor's design team in detail and after the drawings are approved, production starts. Time planning, a clear definition of work sharing and responsibility are the key issues of this contemporary system. Within the scope of this study, all methods are explained widely. This study depends on an empirical research realized in furniture making companies and boatyards. Knowledge gained by both unstructured observations of making processes and interviews with responsible persons. Data is evaluated by qualitative methods. It is an attempt to understand the case and in line with its complementary understanding approach, a deductions set is given together with the observations and interviews in each making method. Then, four variables are determined to evaluate the furniture making methods: a. boat size and purpose of use, b. equipment and organizational capacity of furniture company, c. making time, and d. tolerance for decision changes. As a conclusion, three different methods of furniture makingdemonstrate three different work scales, but not the quality of end product.
Published in | American Journal of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering (Volume 2, Issue 6) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ajmie.20170206.11 |
Page(s) | 205-211 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2018. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Boat Furniture, Yacht Design, On-Site Furniture Making, Mock-up System, Computer Controlled Furniture Making
[1] | E. Emre, ''Report: Observations and Interviews in Roda boatyard'' (prepared for YD 508 course of Izmir University of Economics in 2016), unpublished. |
[2] | S. Peter H., ''Planking and Fastening'', Wooden Boat Publications, ISBN-13: 978-0937822418, 1996. |
[3] | E. Emre, ''Report: Observations and Interviews in Mastori Yachts'' (prepared for YD 508 course of Izmir University of Economics in 2009), unpublished. |
[4] | B. Fred P., ''Boat Joinery and Cabinet Making Simplified'', first edition, International Marine - Ragged Mountain Press, ISBN-13: 978-0070053076, 1993. |
[5] | E. Emre, ''Report: Observations and Interviews in Viking Marin'' (prepared for YD 508 course of Izmir University of Economics in 2008), unpublished. |
[6] | E. Emre, ''Report: Observations and Interviews in Sultan Marine'' (prepared for YD 508 course of Izmir University of Economics in 2011), unpublished. |
[7] | N. Michael, ''Boat Interior Construction'', second edition, Sheridan House, ISBN-13: 978-1574091533, 2009. |
[8] | R. Andy, ''The Complete Illustrated guide to Furniture & Cabinet Construction'', The Taunton Press, ISBN-13: 978-1-56158-402-4, 2001. |
[9] | P. Brown, ''Carpentry and Joinery'', third edition, Butterworth Heinemann, 2001. |
[10] | S. Peter H., ''Painting and Varnishing'', Wooden Boat Publications, ISBN-13: 978-0937822333, 1995. |
[11] | E. Emre, ''Report: Observations and Interviews in Ulutas company'' (prepared for YD 508 course of Izmir University of Economics in 2012), unpublished. |
APA Style
Emre Ergul, Andrea Ratti, Sebastiano Ercoli, Arianna Bionda. (2018). An Evaluation of Furniture Making Methods for Yachts. American Journal of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, 2(6), 205-211. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajmie.20170206.11
ACS Style
Emre Ergul; Andrea Ratti; Sebastiano Ercoli; Arianna Bionda. An Evaluation of Furniture Making Methods for Yachts. Am. J. Mech. Ind. Eng. 2018, 2(6), 205-211. doi: 10.11648/j.ajmie.20170206.11
AMA Style
Emre Ergul, Andrea Ratti, Sebastiano Ercoli, Arianna Bionda. An Evaluation of Furniture Making Methods for Yachts. Am J Mech Ind Eng. 2018;2(6):205-211. doi: 10.11648/j.ajmie.20170206.11
@article{10.11648/j.ajmie.20170206.11, author = {Emre Ergul and Andrea Ratti and Sebastiano Ercoli and Arianna Bionda}, title = {An Evaluation of Furniture Making Methods for Yachts}, journal = {American Journal of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering}, volume = {2}, number = {6}, pages = {205-211}, doi = {10.11648/j.ajmie.20170206.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajmie.20170206.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajmie.20170206.11}, abstract = {There are mainly three different methods of furniture making for yachts as on-site method, mock-up method and computerized method. On-site method is the oldest and traditional way which has been developed by old talented wooden boat builders. In fact, the method is still alive in many small boatyards where the artisans apply the techniques learned by their masters. Mock-up method separates the construction process into two: boat building and furniture making. Hull, bulkheads, engines installation, mechanical and electrical infrastructure, all are made by a boatyard and furnitures are made by a sub-contractor, which indicates the furniture making is a specialization. Computerized method is the advanced way, developed in the last decade. All furnitures are drawn phase by phase by the sub-contractor's design team in detail and after the drawings are approved, production starts. Time planning, a clear definition of work sharing and responsibility are the key issues of this contemporary system. Within the scope of this study, all methods are explained widely. This study depends on an empirical research realized in furniture making companies and boatyards. Knowledge gained by both unstructured observations of making processes and interviews with responsible persons. Data is evaluated by qualitative methods. It is an attempt to understand the case and in line with its complementary understanding approach, a deductions set is given together with the observations and interviews in each making method. Then, four variables are determined to evaluate the furniture making methods: a. boat size and purpose of use, b. equipment and organizational capacity of furniture company, c. making time, and d. tolerance for decision changes. As a conclusion, three different methods of furniture makingdemonstrate three different work scales, but not the quality of end product.}, year = {2018} }
TY - JOUR T1 - An Evaluation of Furniture Making Methods for Yachts AU - Emre Ergul AU - Andrea Ratti AU - Sebastiano Ercoli AU - Arianna Bionda Y1 - 2018/01/08 PY - 2018 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajmie.20170206.11 DO - 10.11648/j.ajmie.20170206.11 T2 - American Journal of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering JF - American Journal of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering JO - American Journal of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering SP - 205 EP - 211 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2575-6060 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajmie.20170206.11 AB - There are mainly three different methods of furniture making for yachts as on-site method, mock-up method and computerized method. On-site method is the oldest and traditional way which has been developed by old talented wooden boat builders. In fact, the method is still alive in many small boatyards where the artisans apply the techniques learned by their masters. Mock-up method separates the construction process into two: boat building and furniture making. Hull, bulkheads, engines installation, mechanical and electrical infrastructure, all are made by a boatyard and furnitures are made by a sub-contractor, which indicates the furniture making is a specialization. Computerized method is the advanced way, developed in the last decade. All furnitures are drawn phase by phase by the sub-contractor's design team in detail and after the drawings are approved, production starts. Time planning, a clear definition of work sharing and responsibility are the key issues of this contemporary system. Within the scope of this study, all methods are explained widely. This study depends on an empirical research realized in furniture making companies and boatyards. Knowledge gained by both unstructured observations of making processes and interviews with responsible persons. Data is evaluated by qualitative methods. It is an attempt to understand the case and in line with its complementary understanding approach, a deductions set is given together with the observations and interviews in each making method. Then, four variables are determined to evaluate the furniture making methods: a. boat size and purpose of use, b. equipment and organizational capacity of furniture company, c. making time, and d. tolerance for decision changes. As a conclusion, three different methods of furniture makingdemonstrate three different work scales, but not the quality of end product. VL - 2 IS - 6 ER -