... or was the SWATH design that important?
As a diver who gets seasick, the swath design was what drew me to Nekton, and would get me back. One more dive boat like all the other dive boats won't do anything for me or other divers drawn to Nekton precisely for the stability of their boats.
Dan, you can't characterize liveaboards overall as cramped. [...] characterizing them all as cramped distorts the real picture. [...] I was also calculating how much it is per day for a couple to dive on land...
If this is directed at me, everyone keeps taking my comments out of context. Except for my seasickness, I love live-aboards. Aqua Cat was very roomy. And if it was not for the fact that it bounced around like a cork with its shallow draft (necessary in the shallow waters it sailed through) I'd have loved it.
I was responding to a poster who wanted CHEAP and COMFORTABLE together, and whose husband DOES NOT DIVE! So, one diver and one non-diver, and unwilling to pay for an upscale live-aboard. A hotel on land would have activities for the non-diver, and even a small hotel room would be roomier than what they'd get on a CHEAP live-aboard, which is what the poster was looking for.
I am NOT saying that all live-aboards are cramped. I am saying that boats have less room than hotels, and that if you want comfort you have to pay for it. The poster wanted Aggressor comfort at Nekton prices, and I was just saying I didn't think she'd find that.
* * * * *
Back to the OP, I'm sorry to hear it's not going to work out, but I am not surprised. Money is tight and tourism is down and a retro-fit would be expensive.
But if anyone brings a stable boat to the dive business while I'm still able to dive, and if I hear about it, I'm in! (And I won't expect Nekton prices. I'll expect to pay premium prices, and I'll do so gladly for that kind of boat.) Until then, it's live-on-land for me.