[PSUBS-MAILIST] new sub
Jon Wallace
jonw at psubs.org
Tue Apr 15 12:27:09 EDT 2014
Some things to consider. The discussion started with a purpose of
commercial diving for profit. I think you'll have a very tough time
finding a public grant to underwrite that purpose. I believe searching
for a grant would mean setting up a non-profit and building the
submarine primarily for non-profit use, ie underwater conservation as
you've indicated. However, that means Scott Waters would not own a 3k
capable sub, the non-profit would and they could also limit your use of
it. Steve Jobs started APPLE but was also dumped by them. Ken Olsen
started Digital Equipment Company but was dumped by them. The corporate
world is littered with such illustrative cases. So even if you founded
the non-profit and was a founding executive of it there is no guarantee
that you would remain one and be able to get the full use out of the
submarine that you intended.
You might also have to justify why a 3k capable sub is necessary for
underwater conservation, ie how many things worth conserving are located
between 1k and 3k feet? At those depths which are out of reach for
virtually 99.9% of the worlds population, who is going to benefit from
such conservation? For example, a grant for a K-250 would be factors
easier because you could justify researching and conserving hundreds of
miles of coral reef within easy access of sport divers and glass-bottom
boats in the shallow Florida waters which would serve to educate
thousands of visitors each year.
You would probably be better off getting a private group of investors
whom share your love of fabrication and underwater exploration, and
forming a time-share agreement for use of the submarine between them.
That limits your own investment and likely gets you enough time to do
the kind of things you want to do with the submarine when it's your time
to use it. Or go back to your commercial diving purpose and find a
handful of investors to form a corporation for that purpose. As long as
you're still connected with your hardware business, sharing the profits
of the commercial submarine may not be too bad starting off. As the
business grew you might eventually be able to buy out some of the
beginning investors and gain more profit.
Your self-admittance (honorable and honest, certainly) that you are not
a very good engineer or fabricator is not going to provide the kind of
confidence that serious investors, public or private, are going to be
looking for especially when you are trying to sell the idea of a vessel
that will require very good engineering and fabrication. You would
likely get back a counter stating, yeah we're in but not if you build
it. Now the "group" goes out to bid for a commercially built submarine
at a price that you can't afford to participate in and all of a sudden
you're out and they are running away with your idea. Having good
business abilities and being able to pull resources together is a great
gift but such a manager whom also has a devoted interest in submarines
probably isn't necessary. Some investors may feel that having a manager
not emotionally tied to the project would be a better choice to ensure
budgets stay within reason.
Jon
On 4/15/2014 9:22 AM, swaters at waters-ks.com wrote:
> So I believe in order to reach this goal of a extremely deep diving
> very work capable submarine I am going to have to really tap some
> resources. I think I have a few choices
> *Devote as much of my own money to making this project possible which
> I worry is not enough.
> *Stop working on the sub project and focus on growing my business for
> a number of years and "someday" get back to it when I have the resources.
> *Earn a grant(s) to make this project possible
> I know asking for a grant is like a business plan. The contributor
> wants to see the plan, the aimed goal, as many securities as possible,
> and a benefit to themselves to contributing. I believe in order to
> truly reach my next goal that I have to work towards a grant. I have
> two main questions for the group
> 1) Who would be good prospects for a grant, how do I approach them,
> and does anyone have any experience they could pass along the way?
> 2) What kind of goals could this submarine be geared towards that
> would be attractive to a contributor? I don't believe "Underwater
> conservation" is good enough, they would want specifics.
> I am not a very good engineer, not the best fabricator, but have good
> business abilities and good at pulling resources to make things
> possible. I think with the help of everyone on psubs this can be a
> reality.
> Thanks,
> Scott Waters
>
>
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