Scratch to me means, starting from a plan, or a plan you conceived yourself. What tools you use, does not enter into the equation, neither does the materials involved.
Now you mentioned cookies I remembered a TV recipe on a morning show.Maybe the discussion is a bit ridiculous The term itself is screaming for different perceptions and arguments. I'm not sure but I guess the reason Dave called it semi-scratch is because the build contains premanufactured parts (produced by a third party).
Bordering the extremes you could outsource the production of every single part and then it would be a custom made kit.
At the extremes you could also outsource the build work and buy a totally finished custom made ship. Even then you could still argue that it is 100% scratch build - just not by you but someone else
At the grocery store you can also buy homemade cookies, homemade jam and homemade meatballs.
Well yes...outsourcing production could be the reason, but... let's get the timber as an example. How many of us have the ability to cut lumber? I mean from the tree: chop the tree and process until you will get the 4.00mm strips for planking. I know, this kinda the extreme example, but it shows that you cannot call your model a scratch-build unless you process timber with your own hands? Oh...almost forget to mention, you have to grow your own trees (before chopping)Chipping in from the side . . . to me scratch would be just that. . . what I can or could produce with MY OWN hands and skill and not outsourced. Maybe extreme view of a newbie who has not done a "scratch" build butt had a kit in some form to build from. PT-2 (Rich)
Were you born in the USSR?I regret that, but when I was a newbie I didn't know about contraception
atMuhaha. As I said, the term is screaming for arguments
BTW, about PT-2's remark "a newbie who has not done a scratch build butt". I regret that, but when I was a newbie I didn't know about contraception