I really don't think starting from scratch is a good idea. In general, you don't want to do that unless you're a lone developer with little experience or your business or product is tanking. And of course there's always horror stories of Super Duper Programmers who tank a project by starting over from scratch with their awesome idea and are unable to get it off the ground, costing the business millions of dollars. Let's take a look at some previous Programmers.SE discussions:
Project is nearly done, but procedural spaghetti code. Do I rewrite or just keep trying to ship it?
This is not applicable because we do not know the source code and it doesn't concern us anyways, but there's still some good advice here by Joeri Sebrechts here:
Communicate, communicate, communicate. You must be very open and frank about the state of the project and your ideas on how to proceed, even if you're unsure and see multiple paths. This leaves the business owner the choice on what to do. If you keep knowledge to yourself, you deprive them of choices.
The developers are very good at doing this, so no complaints there.
Resist the temptation of the full rewrite. While you are rewriting, the business has no product. Also, a rewrite rarely turns out as good as you imagined it. Instead choose an architecture and migrate the codebase to it gradually. Even a horrible codebase can be salvaged this way. Read books about refactoring to help you along.
If they yanked the plug on the project there will be uproar because all of the progress and input from the users would be lost. Then we'll be in the dark while they work on a new idea that could take months to come to fruition. The negative backlash and the slim chance of the new idea being better would no doubt cause fatigue and anger from the community.
Learn about automated testing / unit testing. You have to build up confidence in the code, and the way to do that is to cover it with automated tests. This goes hand-in-hand with refactoring. As long as you don't have the tests, test manually and comprehensively (try to break your code, because your users will do so). Log all the bugs you find so you can prioritize and fix them (you won't have time to fix all bugs, no software ships bug-free in the real world).
There is no better testing method than integration testing (real world usage). Meta also counts as a very successful bug tracker. It's not as unwieldly as a bugzilla which is more appropriate for internal use. Sometimes we forget how successful bug tracking on Meta is because it's basically a forum.
Learn about how to deploy a web application and keep it running. The book Web Operations: Keeping the Data On Time is a good start.
Again, they're really good at doing this. How many times have you counted them taking the entire website offline to do maintenance in the past 6 months? How many of those times were related to new features? We also see developers responding to bug reports and pushing fixes transparently.
A large part of my code has a major design flaw. Finish it off or fix it now?
TL;DR: it's better to finish off your initial version and get a product out before you even think about a rewrite. If Documentation was scrapped everytime it had some form of progress, the users would stop wanting to participate in the beta or discussing the issues and it would probably be stuck in Developmental Hell. And this is a given, but the finished product is usually (but not always) going to be substantially different from the Beta. That's the V2.0 that we want to get to, which wouldn't be possible if we scrap V1.0.
There are significant issues with Documentation, but starting over is only going to make things worse.