MJM Yachts: The World’s Most Fuel Efficient Powerboats

MJM Yachts: World’s Most Fuel Efficient Powerboats

The best indicators of powerboat cruising performance are: (1) fuel efficiency expressed in nautical miles per gallon (NMPG), just like automobiles and (2) speed attained per horsepower installed. With these criteria, MJM Yachts is #1. The attached data sheet, NMPG Fuel Efficiency Comparisons & Observations quantifies how its five models outperform other brands and types of powerboats . . . debunking some long held industry shibboleths in the process.

WHAT THE DATA SHOWS

MJM 29z power with single 260 HP diesel I/O.

1. Diesel I/Os are twice as efficient as gas outboards. A cruise-equipped MJM 29z with single 260 HP diesel I/O weighs the same as a Hunt Surfhunter 29 with twin 250 HP outboards. Harbor cruising at 8.3 knots, the 29z is 3.5x more fuel efficient . . . burning 2 gph vs. the Hunt’s 7 gph. Cruising at 25-26 knots, the MJM is 2x as efficient, getting 3.0 nmpg vs. the Hunt’s 1.5 nmpg.

2. “Hypebrids” is more apt as a description. A diesel/electric hybrid is not yet the answer. The Greenline 33 Hybrid weighs the same as an MJM 34z. At a displacement speed of 8 knots, where you’d think a hybrid would excel, the MJM is more efficient. Top cruising speed (using 87.5% of wide open throttle) for the Hybrid is 12.2 knots, the MJM is 26.6 knots.

3. Jet drives are not efficient. The MJM 36z (twin 220 HP Volvo Penta D3s) weighs the same as a Hinckley Talaria 34 (twin 260 HP Yanmar 6LY3s) with jet drives. The MJM 36z gets twice the mileage of the Hinckley and is 2 knots faster. You will also note a difference in engine/drive packages. The lighter Volvo D3s on the 36z are more fuel efficient than the heavier optional Yanmar 6LY3s.

4. Weight and beam are major performance factors. A Sabre 42 and MJM 40z have a similar length on deck and the same IPS 500 propulsion package. The Sabre is nearly 50% heavier and 2 feet wider. The epoxy composite MJM has (a) the stability from a lower center of gravity to earn ISO Category A Ocean Certification, (b) 50% better fuel efficiency, (c) an upper end cruising speed of 34 knots which is 5.9 knots faster, and (d) greater range.

The MJM 36z underway powered with twin 220 HP stern drive Volvo Penta D3s.

5. Pound for pound and dollar for dollar you get more out of an MJM. The Hinckley Talaria 43 (2×550 HP Cummins powered jet drives) and the 6 foot longer MJM 50z (Volvo Penta 2×435 IPS 600 pod drives) are the same cost per pound, $56. But, the differences are astounding. Apart from 15% more living space, the MJM 50z with 230 less HP has a 2 knot advantage in upper end cruising speed. At the same 25 knot cruise speed, the MJM burns half the fuel with a 200 mile greater range.

6. Triples are just as fuel efficient as twins. The MJM 50z with triple IPS 600s has marginally better fuel efficiency than that same MJM 50z hull powered with twin IPS 600’s. It’s all about the amount of HP applied to overcome resistance at a certain speed… even at displacement speeds. Seems 3 sets of props do a better job of separating the hull from the grip of the water than 1 or 2 sets of props, even with the heavier engine weight.

7. Trawlers are slow, not fuel efficient. Pushing bluff, heavy hulls through the water at anything beyond 10 knots puts fuel efficiency ratings below outboards and jets. The Beneteau 44’ Swift Trawler 50 (anything but “swift”) at its top cruising speed of 20 knots goes a half nautical mile per gallon (40 gph) while the triple IPS 50z at 35 knot cruise goes 3/4’s of a mile per gallon (48.5 gph). The Grand Banks 43 with 2×480 HP Cummins burns more fuel at 10.3 knots (25.4 gph) than a 50z at 24 knots (24.0 gph).

8. Traditional construction results in low performance. This is evident in the Tiara 50 Coupe and the Asian built Hunt 52. Compared to the high-tech and admittedly more expensive advanced epoxy build of the MJM 50z, the Tiara and Hunt burn nearly twice the fuel at comparable speeds and have a 5 knot slower top end cruise speed with reduced range.

WHAT’S THE MJM SECRET?
There are two explanations for enhanced cruising performance: (1) A very good Doug Zurn hull design and (2) a stronger and lighter pre-preg epoxy composite laminate. As Eric Sorenson, Technical Editor of Soundings commented, “Those MJM’s are built like the Dreamliner, they’ll probably last 100 years or more.”

The MJM Yachts 50z, the flagship of the fleet.

Built in Charlestown, MA on Boston Harbor under license by Boston BoatWorks, each MJM is constructed out of Corecell, Kevlar, Eglass, and epoxy through a proprietary wet pre-preg, vacuum-molding and oven post-cure method developed by Mark Lindsay over 35 years building America’s Cup, World Championship and Olympic medal-winning racing sailboats. Sailboats put a high premium on advanced composite construction to deal with extreme loads on while extracting every knot of speed from a finite energy source – the wind.

ECO-FRIENDLY MJM YACHTS
This process fits perfectly with the MJM Yachts GREEN Mission as use of epoxy instead of vinylester and polyester resins virtually eliminates release of VOC’s (Volatile Organic Compounds) into the environment. Then, by burning half the fuel of other boats, owners are contributing to a greener planet as their carbon footprint . . . the amount of hydrocarbons, particulates, nitrogen oxides, and many other contaminants released into the environment . . . is halved.

A 40z hull being removed from the molds after the oven post-cure process.

An epoxy built, fuel-efficient performer contributes to a more satisfying, environmentally sensitive, life on the water . . . not to mention less time and money at the fuel dock. And, like a good stock, it’s not the initial investment, as much as the on-going operating costs, and how it holds its value over time.

CONFESSIONS OF A BOAT CREATOR by Bob Johnstone
I was concerned about installing triple IPS 600s in the 50z because it seemed logical that 3 engines would use 50% more fuel than 2 engines. MJM’s mantra from the outset had been “Twice the Fun, Half the Fuel”. Wouldn’t I be pulling the rug out from under a key reason for MJM success? Our designer, Doug Zurn, and the engineers from Volvo Penta straightened me out, “Bob, fuel efficiency is a function of horsepower applied to overcome the drag of pushing a particular boat through the water at a given speed. So, it doesn’t matter whether it’s 1, 2, or 3 engines, the same amount of HP is required to get that hull going. So, 3 engines will each be working less than 2 engines.” But, I wasn’t buying that theory at displacement speeds under 9 knots, where the major part of boat hours are spent in harbors, watching races, on the ICW, etc. Seemed 3 engines would be just humming there, not very productively, when 2 would more than do the job. They had no answer for that.

Our most experienced dealer thought triple engines were a bad idea because his customers never cruised over 25 knots. Of course, there weren’t many boats around that could, so that hindsight was a safe 20:20 but his son said, “Go for it, Bob.”

MJM Yachts proves that three engines are better than two engines.

 

PERFORMANCE EXCITES
Whether is it was blasting around the harbor in a Sunfish sailboat or a low freeboard Boston Whaler as a kid, those amazing moments launched most of us into the world of boating as a lifetime pursuit. Trouble is, as the boats got bigger, the thrill of driving the early sports car like craft was being lost . . . along with that feeling of being one with wind, boat and wave. That was the motivation in creating J Boats, Inc., which is the leading performance brand of sailboats and where we’re going with MJM Yachts.

So it didn’t take much encouragement from the more youthful of our MJM dealers to brighten the vision of having a 50z that outperformed the Sabre 48, Hinckley Talaria 48 and East Bay 50 by 10 knots, with the same 50 gph fuel burn at 35 knots others got at 25 knots, while keeping a lower profile, flush decks and side doors at floating dock height. We were off and running.

VOILA! 3 ARE BETTER THAN 2
Of the 11 MJM 50z’s ordered to date, 9 have been triples. Only 2 have ordered twins. One for shoal cruising on the Chesapeake and Bahamas and the other due to a ledge in front of his dock in Marblehead harbor. The 50z with twins draws only 2 feet 10 inches which is less than a 40z, because the drives are mounted further up and outboard under the hull on the deadrise.

And, fuel efficiency of triples is marginally better at slow harbor speeds on a heavier boat than with twins. No one forecast this. My explanation from sailing days is that 3 sets of props blowing bubbles under the back end of the hull do a better job than 2 sets of props or even a single prop in helping the boat break loose from the drag of the water. Sailors were always trying to come up with schemes to win races, like pumping liquid ivory soap through a head’s overboard discharge to lubricate the hull.

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MJM 50z

You’ll find livable cruising on the MJM 50z.

MJM launches the MJM 50z,  its largest model yet with innovative spaces for more time aboard.

For five full years, Bob Johnstone, the legendary founder of MJM Yachts, didn’t want to build his new 50-footer. In fact, he didn’t want to build anything larger than the 40-footer he introduced in 2009. “I thought it was the perfect all-around boat,” he says. “Small enough to be easily managed solo, comfortable enough to live on for a month or more. Who needs a bigger boat?” Other people liked the 40-footer as well. In fact, Johnstone has sold 57 of them at more than $1 million each.

But then Johnstone and his wife, Mary (the Mary of Mary Johnstone’s Motorboat, or MJM), did even more cruising on their own 40 and thought that it would be nice to have more—and larger—private spaces on board for relaxing, reading and working (Johnstone uses the boat as his office). And the MJM 50z, which he calls “a more livable cruising boat,” was born.

The new MJM 50—officially a 50z for designer Doug Zurn—is more than just a larger 40z. The use of space both inside and out is innovative to say the least. The 50z also happens to be the lightest, fastest, most fuel-efficient, seaworthy (with an ISO Category A offshore certificate) and seakindly (with a standard Seakeeper gyro-stabilizer) in its size category. It’s also easy to maneuver, with Volvo’s IPS pod drives and joystick control, and its low profile means you won’t have to wait for a ton of bridges if your cruising plans call for the ICW.

All this didn’t happen by accident. Johnstone has believed in creating innovative, lightweight, high-performing hulls ever since he co-founded J/Boats with his brother, Rod, in 1977. The Johnstones have sold more than 11,000 J/Boats since then. When he wanted to make what he called the ultimate powerboat in 2002, Johnstone formed MJM and teamed up with Zurn, definitely a kindred spirit. Zurn had already designed the 38-foot Shelter Island Runabout, a long, low, narrow, head-turning performer for Billy Joel that caught Johnstone’s fancy. To build his new boat, Johnstone turned to Mark Lindsay of Boston BoatWorks, who had more than 30 years experience building high-tech offshore racing sailboats. Boston BoatWorks uses a proprietary epoxy composite pre-preg, oven-cured, vacuum-molding system to create light, strong and stiff boats. Within a year, MJM launched its first boat, the 34z. The line also now includes the 29z, 36z, 40z, and the new 50z.

I’ve known Zurn since his Billy Joel days, and he walked me through the MJM 50z in Miami. Zurn designed the standard 50z with two 435-hp Volvo D6 diesels and IPS 600 pod drives that produce a top speed of 33.8 knots. But Johnstone wanted to offer a faster boat, so this one has a third engine and pod. The results are spectacular. Top speed with triples jumped to 40.3 knots. The surprise was the 50z with three engines burns less fuel than the same boat with two.

Zurn says the efficiency comes from the boat’s light weight and narrow beam. The slender, deep-V hull—the transom has a 19-degree deadrise—slices through the waves while the chine flats direct water outward. It’s a long, low boat with exceptionally clean, timeless lines, a touch of Carolina flair forward, and a gentle rise and fall of the sheer.

Below, the interior is light and, despite the narrow beam, open and spacious. The master stateroom forward, with classic Herreshoff panels on the walls, has standing headroom even for me at nearly 6′ 2″. The island berth is a full 7 feet across at the head and 6′ 6″ long, with four storage cabinets underneath—there’s also storage under the sole to hold full-size luggage. But the real appeal is a combination desk and dressing table to port, with an inviting big, plush reading chair. Instead of just a sleeping area, the master also can serve as a private working or relaxing space during the day. The master head to port is large and bright with a shower (complete with seat) behind a glass door. A matching head is across on the starboard side; it serves as a day head or as an ensuite if the boat is configured for a second stateroom.

Johnstone calls the galley and salon area in the middle of the boat a “great cabin” to accentuate its spaciousness. The galley to port is well equipped for weeks or even months of living on board, with tons of storage, including four large lockers under the teak-and-holly sole—it’s covered with clear gloss Awlgrip for easy maintenance. On starboard, an L-shaped settee faces a table that can be lowered to create a double berth at night. The innovation here is the ability to convert this area into an enclosed, private second cabin. Three wooden side panels weighing 12 pounds each can be stored upright in a pocket in the forward bulkhead. When deployed, the panels lock together and fit into anchors in the sole and a recessed channel overhead creating a totally enclosed second stateroom. Johnstone says this assembly takes about 10 minutes.

Moving aft, two unusually wide teak stairs lead up to the bridge deck and cockpit, which are all on the same level. The bridge deck is protected by a fixed overhead and Strataglass side panels; more panels can be dropped aft to enclose the bridge deck fully. Sight lines in all directions are excellent. The captain has a doublewide Stidd seat; the navigator has another Stidd seat to port. Dual 15-inch Raymarine plotter screens are centered at the helm; a Volvo EVC display is on the right.

What’s unusual here is that the bridge deck also serves as an extra social and sleeping area. A U-shaped settee aft of the captain’s seat faces a telescoping table; this can convert to a large double berth. On the port side, a straight settee converts to a single. A large hatch on the bridge deck opens to four teak steps down to the standard Seakeeper 9 gyro-stabilizer that’s mounted on a special structural grid.

An optional Bimini can cover the boat’s exterior social area, the cockpit. A wet bar and fridge are on the port side, while a two-person, aft-facing settee is to starboard. You climb on and off the boat here via doors on either side, plus a transom door in the stern quarter leads to the gently curved swim platform. A large bench seat all the way aft can hold five and faces a beautiful, teak table mounted on two fixed stainless steel pedestals. Two large hatches open in the cockpit for easy access to the engines and the standard Northern Lights 9kW genset.

Johnstone says the next version of the 50z, an express model, will have more of a glass-enclosed bridge deck. After that? For now, he won’t say. But if there is another MJM beyond the 50z, you can bet it will be fast, fuel-efficient and have lots of livable space for easy cruising.

SPECIFICATIONS

LOA: 55′ 3″
Beam: 15′ 0″
Draft: 2′ 11″ with twin IPS; 3′ 10″ with triple IPS
Weight: 35,850 lbs.
Fuel/Water: 520/170 gals.
Standard Power: 2x (or optional 3x) 435-hp Volvo Penta IPS 600 pod drives
Cruise/Top speed: 25/33.8 knots twin Volvos; 35/40.3 knots triple Volvos
MSRP: $1,750,000 for twins; $1,910,000 for triples

CONTACT
MJM Yachts
(401) 862-4367
mjmyachts.com

By Peter A. Janssen, Southern Boating Magazine, June 2015

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