Walker Bay Generation 525

Love Me Tender

The Walker Bay Generation 525 pushes boundaries.

The words “yachtsman” and “passion” are so often used together that I worry the emphasis is lost, like describing every boat as unique. That was until I spent time with the Walker Bay team that just delivered a 17-foot RIB they branded Generation 525 that’s intended to serve the 115- 135-foot yacht market rather competitively.

Passion, as it turns out, is precisely what drove naval engineers and product specialists to tweak and rethink nearly every aspect of a niche market, creating a RIB that pushes the boundaries of innovation and blends durability and practicality to what becomes an extension of the very yacht a tender serves.

Work began three years ago on a new stringer process to vastly improve and achieve a smooth ride. Some RIB manufacturers use a basic plywood stringer to support the hull and top deck. Repeat after me: Plywood and water are not a good mix over time. Think lumpy oatmeal and you get the picture. The Gen 525 incorporates a polyurethane composite micro stringer system in the floor that’s lighter and stronger than wood. Mating the hull and deck together required countless hours of testing various bonding materials. Instead of the typical air cavity between the hull and deck, Walker Bay created a unidirectional glass and a polyurethane stringer grid bonding system to absorb the impact from wave chop. This also serves to make the hull stronger and provides permanent positive buoyancy.

The real trick—and where the word passion comes to play—involves the number of hulls they created to get the ride perfected. Just as your tire alignment can smooth out your car ride, Walker Bay noticed that distortion and misalignment in competitors’ hulls led to poor handling and stress cracks. Engineers built a sophisticated jig and alignment process for joining the main parts, so stress energy is distributed efficiently for a better handling and predictably longer-lasting boat.

Skip Reisert of Tender Care Boats in Ft. Lauderdale, who sells Walker Bay and AB’s Nautilus and Oceanus series of tenders, joined the team as a consultant for the topside work. “So often I get an owner who has commissioned a yacht and wants to outfit it with a tender without really knowing what size will fit or some of the nuances of davit placement, lifting capacity, right down to davit lifting points,” Reisert shared. “For example, a Westport 112 can only support a tender up to 15 feet. Maximum length on the Westport 130 is 18 feet, so this is a very narrow, yet vital measurement consideration when shopping for the right tender.”

Walker Bay took note of the needs of this niche market and strategically located seven extra stainless-steel davit-lifting points and flush-mounted them, greatly reducing the potential of snagging clothing or skin of passengers. The team realized that especially in the charter market, guests are unaccustomed to maintaining a low center of gravity for boarding a tender, so they incorporated port and starboard recessed teak boarding steps and an ingenious removable leaning boarding post handle, all of which leads to a generous-sized clear pathway to seating.

When used for exploring, snorkeling or watersports, the Gen 525 is ready for fun. Retractable ski pole, deluxe boarding ladder and bow area sunpad are all options, along with the standard insulated cooler locker for refreshments and freshwater shower with 10-gallon capacity.

Our test boat in Naples, Florida, was equipped with a very quiet Honda 115 outboard. Once we left the no-wake zone, the tender popped up on plane effortlessly and held a true course with nary a touch on the hydraulic tilt steering and without any loss of the horizon even though I had engaged the driver’s side flip-up bolster seat. We topped out at 44 mph with two people on board and a full tank (32 gallons) of fuel. While Honda is the preferred engine partner, Reisert, who is an Evinrude dealer, says the E-TEC 115 two-stroke engine will easily add another 3-4 mph—more than enough speed to make your eyes water and get back home or to the yacht quickly.

With passenger backrest cushions, five stainless steel cup holders, the aforementioned cooler, and four pop-up cleats, those with access to the ICW may consider this a “second” boat for your dock and those impromptu waterfront dining dashes with friends—and bring a bunch of them. It’s rated for 10 passengers.

“Walker Bay has raised the bar in every way with this Generation 525,” says Reisert. “They added deadrise in the hull, smoothed out the ride, are easily two to three miles per hour faster than the competition, and created an open layout and vinyl seating appearance that will complement your yacht.”

By Alan Wendt, Southern Boating Magazine November 2016

Specifications:
LOA: 17′ 2″
Beam: 8′ 4″
Weight: 1,160 lbs.
Fuel: 32 gals.
Max horsepower: 115 hp
MSRP: $49,995
walkerbay.com

Regulator 41

Regulator Marine unleashes their largest center console yet and tempts sportfisherman buyers to reconsider.

It’s entirely unsatisfying to push a boat’s throttles forward and find there’s nothing left, that the engines have given their all. Regulator Marine president Joan Maxwell knows her customers never want to be without that extra “oomph,” and that’s why her design team nixed a triple outboard option on the Regulator 41. “It has to be quad 350-horespower engines,” Maxwell explained during a tour of the new 41 earlier this year. “Our customers wouldn’t be happy with any less horsepower on a boat this big.”

Actual boat owner experience shows Maxwell was right. Chris Hall Sr., the chairman of Bluewater Yacht Sales and the owner of the first Regulator 41 off the line, has crisscrossed Florida in the 41 and has also run her up and down the East Coast. In early June, he ran 120 miles from Hampton, Virginia, to Annapolis, Maryland, simply for lunch. “It’s not just the speed but the ride,” Hall Sr. says. “It is so comfortable and easy to handle, it changes the game. You can cruise in the mid-40s comfortably even when the conditions are less than ideal. I’m a big boat, Viking guy, but this boat has widened my horizons for sure.” The ability to run at such speeds with confidence rests on the hull and deep-V entry with a 24-degree deadrise.

Regulator naval architect Lou Codega took about a year to complete the design of the new 41, and it was built specifically for Yamaha’s Helm Master system. Helm Master offers joystick control for easy low-speed maneuvering around the docks as well as speed control, which is like cruise control for your car. Speed control locks in the rpm and then you can step up the rpm by 15 percent or down 10 percent with the touch of a button.

“I’m not an expert around the docks, but with Helm Master this boat is easy to put into a slip,” explains Regulator’s marketing director, Heather Groves. “What our customers like is you don’t need an entire crew to run the 41. Some people are stepping up from our 34, or in other cases, coming down from a larger boat like a Viking.”

The builder is well known for constructing boats that take on the roughest water, and it all begins with the “grillage system”, a molded fiberglass stringer system that adds to the hull strength. Bonded to the hull, the grillage system reduces stress at the deck, liner and hull joint, while foam is injected into voids to absorb noise and add strength. A super-strong polybond adhesive system joins the grillage, liner and hull and allows it to function as a single piece. Because Regulator owners are determined to fish in any weather, they will square off with rough, confused seas, and the 41 performs with nary a shake or rattle.

Size does matter on a fishing boat, and while the Regulator 41 has an LOA of 41′ 3″, with the engines and Armstrong bracket the boat measures out to an actual 47′ 3″. That configuration offers a huge amount of space in the cockpit—enough room to mount a fighting chair as one customer has already done. It also allows for a big and beefy rear transom, which contains an 84-gallon fish box in the center flanked by two 40-gallon live wells. A cleverly hidden flush-folding bench seat in the transom bulkhead offers space for two people. Another convenience feature is the starboard-side entry door, which allows for easier boarding at the dock. There’s also a swim ladder engineered into the deck, so with the side door open you can flip up the deck cover, unfold the ladder and then close the deck cover. Smart.

“It may look like a pleasure boat, but it’s also a true fishing boat,” Groves says. “You see the large station behind the bench seat, with numerous drawers for fishing gear, and there are well-placed rocket launchers, rod holders and rod storage throughout the boat. The pipe work is done by G.G. Schmitt & Sons. This boat we are on now is built with the optional second helm station, with seating for two and the joystick control. You can fully operate the boat from up there.”

On the main deck, the expansive dash on the 41 offers plenty of space for three 17-inch multifunction displays (MFDs). The three-person helm bench offers a variety of configurations for sitting or standing. The driver looks forward to an Edson polished silver steering wheel and Yamaha throttles and shifters as well as the joystick control, which is in a comfortable position for easy operation. There are no mechanical gauges—all the system data is displayed on the MFDs—and one of the only throwbacks to yesteryear is the Ritchie Compass mounted on the top center of the dash.

Down below in the cabin, the powerful 10,000 BTU A/C system keeps things cool thanks to the Fischer Panda 8kW diesel generator that supplies the electricity when the engines are off. The cabin also features a 28-inch flat-screen TV, queen-size bed and generous head and shower area, as well as a galley with cooktop, microwave and freshwater sink. Storage is plentiful and the joinery is cherry wood. In addition, inside the console is a hatch that allows access to the back of the dash, so working on the electronics and their connections is a breeze.

Back on the main deck, the Regulator 41’s forward bow area offers multiple areas to relax while underway and is decidedly angled more toward cruising than angling. For example, the lounging mezzanine seat for two in front of the console is long and large enough to take a nap on, and the two facing bench seats on either side of the bow offer flip-up backrests. There’s also a dining table in the bow that rises electronically for meals or card games and then drops down flush with the deck when not in use. All the way forward on the bow is a windlass, compartment for the anchor chain and line, and freshwater hose.

“The 41 represented a challenge for our company,” Maxwell recalls. “We knew we could build the fiberglass parts without a problem. But we had angst when thinking about the systems and what would be required to run a boat like this. It’s big and it’s new, and a partner like Yamaha and the Helm Master system is what makes it work so well for the customer.”

By Doug Thompson, Southern Boating Magazine September 2016

SPECIFICATIONS:
LOA: 41′ 3″
Beam: 12′ 6″
Draft: 3′ 1″
Weight: 20,100 lbs.
Fuel/Water: 600/60 U.S. gals.
Power: 4x Yamaha F350 four-stroke outboards @ 350-hp
Cruise/Top speed: 35.9/63.5 mph
MSRP: Inquire

CONTACT:
Regulator Marine
187 Peanut Drive
Edenton, NC 27932
(252) 482-3837
regulatormarine.com

 

Wellcraft 262

The new Wellcraft 262 has everything a fisherman needs for a day on the water. The center console has a fiberglass T-top, ample rod holders and rod storage, port and starboard baitwells/livewells, raw water wash-down, and port and starboard fish boxes with macerators.

The bow area features a unique sliding cooler for multiple seating layouts, and the optional dive door makes boarding and departing easier. A deluxe leaning post delivers with a backrest and cooler, and a folding aft seat provides more room to fish as well as extra seating when open. The 262 (26’4″ LOA, 9′ beam) is designed to handle twin engines with up to 500 horsepower. wellcraft.com

Wajer 55

Based on the award-winning 37- and 38-foot models, the Wajer 55 is a perfect balance of beauty and performance. Comfortable seats will keep the pilot and passengers secure when running in big seas. When lounging in the intracoastal, Wajer provides large sunpads aft and near the transom. The swimming platform on the Wager 55 can also be used as a swimming ladder or gangway. Built-in steps with teak decking make getting in and out of the water easy. Below-deck, Wajer will customize the cabin but most buyers of the smaller models opt for a small cabin for the family to get out of the sun.
wajer.nl

Viking Yachts 37 Billfish

Now an integral part of the Viking Yachts lineup, the Viking Yachts 37 Billfish (37’8″ LOA, 13’10” beam) is built to be a canyon-ready tournament contender that’s equally at home fishing for blue marlin in The Bahamas or Pacific sailfish in Costa Rica.

The day-boat style offers unfettered access to the 86-square foot cockpit equipped with a bait freezer, tackle stowage, a transom door with a lift gate, insulated fishboxes, and a transom livewell. The open salon provides all-weather protection with a comfortable U-shape dinette and hi-lo fiberglass table that converts to a bunk opposite a cushioned lounge. At the end of the day there’s plenty of room to relax in a comfortable environment—a significant element missing from today’s wide-open, large center-console boats. vikingyachts.com

All In the Family: Palm Beach PB65 and PB42

Palm Beach’s flagship yacht, the PB65 (70′ LOA, 19’2″ beam), has received a substantial upgrade for 2017. The Palm Beach PB65 has a high-quality build,  finishes and teak styling blend seagoing competence with beauty.

A vast, light-filled interior features a salon with power windows, spacious cabins and a rear cockpit that can comfortably host up to eight people. Twin Volvo Penta IPS 950 engines deliver a top speed of 32 knots with a range of 700 nautical miles at a cruising speed of 25 knots. Palm Beach is also debuting the new PB42 (46′ LOA, 14’6″ beam). Her semi-displacement bottom and low center of gravity provide a confident and stable ride.

A spacious, light-filled interior includes luxury staterooms with ample headroom throughout. The climate-controlled salon delivers premium comfort, and power windows forward and aft bring nature closer.
pbmotoryachts.com

Ocean Alexander 100

The Ocean Alexander 100 is undergoing a redesign since its successful debut in 2014. With world-renowned Evan K. Marshall as the designer, the OA 100 (100’2″ LOA, 23′ beam) has the feel of a megayacht. The innovative use of aluminum I-beams allows for an open interior that lets in natural light. Owners and guests will also enjoy the incredible views at sea.

The Ocean Alexander 100 offers features found on larger yachts, including a newly designed main deck with an on-deck master stateroom. With 10 guests in 5 ensuite cabins and with an enclosed skylounge, the owner has design flexibility for entertainment and guest spaces, and in main areas such as the galley, access to staterooms, crew accommodations, and maintenance areas of the yacht.
oceanalexander.com

Don’t Miss: Numarine 60Fly

Making its U.S. debut, the Numarine 60Fly offers exceptional space on board. The full-beam suite with large picture windows at water level fills the cabin with light and offers picturesque views for those reclining in bed. Three ensuite guest cabins come loaded with stowage space.

The use of glass, leather and stainless steel give the Numarine 60Fly (60’4″ LOA, 16’8″ beam) a contemporary feel. The galley is incorporated into the main salon and divided by a useful bar. Flipping open hatches in the windows or electrically lowering the forward side windows in the main salon allows fresh air to circulate throughout the boat. The new 60 Flybridge is the first Numarine yacht to use all LED lighting.

numarine.com

Vicem Custom 65′ Flybridge

One word describes the Vicem Custom 65′ Flybridge at FLIBS: spacious. With her 65-foot LOA and 18’5″ beam, there’s sufficient interior volume for owners to choose from two- and three-cabin designs. Configurations offer a luxurious galley-up or galley-down choice, with a convertible office or a dinette below.

The galley-up version offers a below-deck layout with three cabins plus an additional berth accessible from the VIP cabin for eight guests. Powered by twin Volvo Penta D11 625-hp engines, the 65′ Flybridge is equipped for long voyages and offers a cruising range of 915 nautical miles at 10 knots, with a top speed of 19 knots. Designed by Vicem’s in-house design team, the 65′ Flybridge has a classic look and offers a quiet, smooth ride. vicem.com

Sunseeker’s Predator 68 & Manhattan 52

The redesigned Sunseeker Predator 68 MK II (71’2″ LOA, 16’7″ beam) features a cockpit door that lowers into the yacht’s deck, opening it up for warmer climates. A full-width sliding sunroof draws in the sunlight while a smart widow design provides natural light for the living space. A generous salon offers U-shaped seating, bar and social seating at the stern. Powered by MAN V8-1200 engines or upgrade to MAN V12-1550.

The new Manhattan 52 (56’5″ LOA, 16′ beam) is the smallest flybridge model Sunseeker has introduced in more than a decade. The yacht is designed to maximize entertainment, light and living space, with curved glass, a unique main deck layout and well-equipped bathing platform, all ideal for entertaining. Powered by Volvo Penta D11-725 or Volvo Penta IPS-950 engines. sunseeker.com

Novurania Catamaran 24 Diesel

No matter the final destination, the Novurania Catamaran 24 Diesel  I/O gets you there in style. The yacht tender, also available with an outboard motor, has a twin-hull design and inflatable collar.

An opening bow ramp is operated electronically, adjustable to any height and makes off-loading people or cargo a breeze. The bow ramp safely accommodates wheelchairs and motorized power chairs. Various deck layouts are available, with side, center console or custom seating arrangements. The Novurania Catamaran 24 Diesel  has a low profile and stable, dry ride make the new luxury yacht tender (23′ LOA, 8’6″ beam) perfect for any use.
novurania.com

Southport 33 LX

The solid ride of the Southport 33 LX is now available with all of the features and creature comforts of a megayacht tender. The new Southport 33 LX (32’6″ LOA, 10’8″ beam) features a wraparound forward seating area for a comfortable lounge space. This new arrangement features more tender-like amenities, including extra refrigeration, a microwave, coffeemaker, food and beverage storage, and preparation areas.

The aft cockpit, a space once reserved for fishing, now becomes a far more inviting place to entertain and relax. With the addition of an L-shaped wraparound lounge in the aft port corner and wet bar with refrigerator and bottle and glass storage in the leaning post, the aft cockpit rivals the front of the boat for comfort and social amenities. southportboats.com

Sea Ray Fly 460 and L550 Fly

The new Sea Ray Fly 460 (46’8″ LOA, 14’12” beam) is spacious for its size, with storage solutions that increase livability including an expanded flybridge made for entertaining. Both helm stations feature Raymarine widescreen displays, and an available joystick control system provides for effortless docking and control of twin 550-hp Cummins inboards. Inside, the full-beam aft ensuite master and additional forward ensuite guest cabins offer customization options.

The sunlit salon features a convenient aft galley and a flush-threshold multi-pane door that opens onto the social cockpit. Sea Ray’s new L550 Fly (56’3″ LOA, 15’7″ beam) utilizes advanced technologies including vacuum infusion structures and a state-of-the-art digital switching system and three cabins. A well-appointed flybridge is geared for entertaining. Twin 850-hp Caterpillar inboards are available with joystick control. searay.com

Don’t Miss the Zurn/NEB 38 at FLIBS

The Zurn/NEB 38 was designed for fishing and diving, and with jet drives powered by twin Volvo Penta D-6 diesel engines you’ll get to your favorite spot quickly. The open cockpit offers an impressive amount of space for a 38-foot boat and includes removable bait wells and fish lockers as well as storage space for rods and diving gear.

The transom seat folds up out of the way for additional room. Below deck the Zurn/NEB 38 (44’2″ LOA, 12′ beam) has an elegant open interior with room for two people. Ceiling accents frame the queen-sized berth with ample drawer storage beneath. Aft of the berth is a head to port, and to starboard a galley with a sink, microwave, small DC fridge, Corian countertop and cabinet storage. zurnyachts.com

Westport W125

With room for 10 people and a six-person crew, the new Westport W125 is steeped in luxury. The yacht features a full-width master stateroom on deck forward with his-and-her baths. Four ensuite guest staterooms enjoy natural light and outside views thanks to hull windows of toughened, laminated glass integrally molded into the hull. The integrated stern boarding area and veranda dining opens up to the main deck salon and formal dining area.

The main deck galley is secluded from guest view and includes a casual breakfast nook dinette. Private crew quarters forward on the lower deck include a captain’s stateroom, two crew double staterooms and a crew’s mess. Powered with twin 2,600-hp MTU diesel engines, the W125 (125′ LOA, 26’2″ beam) cruises around 20 knots.
westportyachts.com

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