i can't say too much about sailing history, but i know enough about the history of surfboard design to offer a little insight since Hobie Alter was, first and foremost, a surfer. it seems like too much of a coincidence that the fiberglass polyurethane sandwich also happened to constitute a major shift in surfboard design, but, admittedly, i'm speculating that his motivations for choosing this construction for his catamarans were similar.
the main cause for changing from wood surfboards is simply that, when damaged, they require immediate, and rigorous attention. the old varnished redwood boards and the later fiberglass-coated balsa boards soaked up water like a sponge if you lost them on the rocks or had and unfortunate collision with a reef, and meant long hours in the shop to prevent unfixable water damage. fiberglass foam boards could be built strong, but fixed without too much trouble.
the secondary reason was that they were lighter and more manueverable,
and lastly, they were less expensive to produce after good balsa blanks were becoming more expensive.
i'm sure all of these reasons figured into hobie's decisions.
i don't think plastic boats represent a major improvement in any of these matters. this may be debatable, i admit. But, even so, the advantages are marginal at best, and we're still left with the fact that, if damaged, your boat is scrap.
i'm glad we don't have to sail wood catamarans anymore. the materials we use now are lighter, stronger, and easier to maintain, but maintenance is the operative term, here.
like i said, if any of your dealers will offer a guarantee against uv damage over a certain period, it's a different ballgame. after all, if you can guarantee that the sun won't break down the plastic, and given how tough it is to hurt it by conventional methods, you've got the potential for a very long-lived boat. but i, for one, won't believe it until someone's willing to put their money where their mouth is.
i feel like i should close by saying that i love my 82 hobie16, and i wouldn't change a thing about it.
