Cheoy Lee presents the CLA 76f

CLA 76f

Cheoy Lee launches a new breed of yachts, and it begins with the CLA 76f.

The “old dog, new tricks” cliché doesn’t apply to Cheoy Lee. For nearly 150 years, they have been building supremely seaworthy vessels, but steady does not mean staid. This old builder has some new tricks. “Cheoy Lee has been around forever,” acknowledges Panu Virtanen, vice president of the North America office. “But there are new buyers now, a younger crowd that looks at boating differently.” So the venerable Hong Kong shipyard has launched a new division called CL Yachts to reach this next generation for whom “boating needs to be fun and effortless,” says Virtanen. The CLA 76f is one of the first embodiments of this philosophy.

Big Changes

A successor to the Cheoy Lee Alpha 76, it features the same Michael Peters hull, but above the waterline, everything has changed. This is no evolved model. It’s a whole new yacht. Step into the main salon and one of the tenets of the CL Yachts brand is readily apparent—the design is on trend. The light, bright, open-plan main deck has 360-degree views through extra-large windows.

Intan Nioridwan of Singapore-based Atolla Design says he strived for a clean, simple style. “We used a combination of wood and good quality leather to let people experience the feeling of high-end warmth and relaxation.” Glossy, medium-toned walnut complements the creamy upholstery, carpet and Majilite overheads that feature decorative bands of stainless steel. These strips are part of the plan. “The design has horizontal aspects to widen the area everywhere, like wood grain, granite and marble patterns, even headboards,” says Nioridwan.

The lounging and dining space is generous thanks to an arrangement that places the galley, lavished in “Silver River” granite, next to the helm all the way forward. It is raised so chefs are not only part of the main deck action but also preside over it. Undercounter Sub-Zero drawers hold refrigerated and frozen items rather than upright appliances to keep the all-around view.

Experience Shows

The advantages of 150 years of shipbuilding experience show in the operation’s second precept: user-friendliness. It’s all done properly, with wide side decks and a foredeck laid out for easy line handling. A ZF remote control with a 25-foot lead plugs into the port side of the flybridge or starboard on the main aft deck for docking.

If you’re more of a stay-out-of-the-way, fair-weather boater, you can find your user-friendliness in the convenient wine cooler next to the interior dining, or the propane barbecue up top or read all the A/V electronics mounted on racks in a salon cabinet that slide out for easy access. Above all, boating must be comfortable for the young clients in CL Yachts’ sights. Motion control is a major factor.

A Seakeeper gyrostabilizer and Zipwake active interceptors hold the CLA 76f steady from the anchorage to high speeds. Interior comforts include an ensuite for each of the four staterooms whose shower stalls are impressively sized. The amidships master stateroom commands the full beam and by placing the bed athwartships to starboard, it has an incredible amount of floor space.

Exterior comforts are found at a very pleasant foredeck lounge with seating and sunpad as well as up on the flybridge with dining and wet bar under a hardtop with an opening sunroof. Both of these areas can also escape the sun by a sunshade that attaches to lightweight carbon fiber poles.

Engine Room

The engine room is a true revelation for a yacht of this size. The two Caterpillar C18s appear petite within the capacious room, leaving loads of space so everything is accessible and serviceable. As Virtanen puts it, you feel like you’re on a little ship in here. Cheoy Lee has always sourced all major equipment and components in the U.S., so servicing and locating spares on this side of the world is straightforward.

The old Alpha had a tender garage; the new CLA 76f has a crew cabin for one instead—a nicely finished mini apartment with a microwave, refrigerator and good-sized head. The tender mounts on the swim platform which integrates a two-stage lift by TNT. In addition to flush, it drops below the waterline to ease swimmers into the water or to load the tender, which can be driven right up on it. Underway, it is raised; the extra height offers safe clearance in a following sea.

Each model line from CL Yachts is a unique concept with different architects, designers and, in the case of the first two models, propulsion types. What ties together the brand is the structural integrity of the builds, says Virtanen. The resin-infused composite hull couples with a foam-cored monocoque structure. Careful engineering and extensive use of carbon fiber provides a light but strong structure so the boats operate more efficiently.

For the CLA 76f, this means a 29-knot top speed. That’s the advertised max at least. During a sea trial off Port Everglades in one- to two-foot seas, she reached 30.7 knots with 82 percent water and 27 percent fuel. Consumption at 9.6 knots was a total of just 13 gallons an hour between both engines.

This is only the beginning for CL Yachts. After debuting the CLA 76f and CLB 72  last fall, it began work on the fleet’s third model: the ultra-spacious CLB 88 which will premiere in Miami next February. Something completely different will come after that—a 95-foot next-generation explorer.

“This is what CL Yachts is all about,” says Virtanen, “all new designers, all new vision, from  one of the oldest builders in the world.”

By Kate Lardy, Southern Boating May 2019

ABOUT THE CLB 72

At the debut of CL Yachts’ other new model, everyone touring the CLB 72 had the same question for Panu Virtanen: “Can I take this cheese knife on display here and cut the counter?” This seeming destructive streak among boat show attendees was really just curiosity.

The galley is covered in opaque black Fenix NTM, which uses nanotechnology to heal itself thermally of accidental light scratches. It’s one of several innovative materials used thanks to the fresh perspective of Carmen Lau, an up-and-coming Hong Kong designer.

She chose the dark galley finish as a focal point and contrast to the light-hued main deck that features the largest windows classification society RINA would allow. Another spot that highlights her creativity is the master, which she arranged to show off huge hull windows and created an etched glass feature wall between the stateroom and head that frosts at the press of a button.

Howard Apollonio took a similarly fresh look at the hull design and started from scratch to optimize it for Volvo IPS1350 engines. In keeping with CL Yachts’ ethos of fun, easy boating, the joystick-controlled drives negate the need for thrusters, so there is no need to worry about hydraulics. House power is simplified too; a Decision-Maker 3500 Auto Parallel system senses the load automatically to transfer or share it between two 24kW Kohler gensets.

This first hull is under contract and two more are sold, but Lau is working with CL Yachts on two further spec builds. It will be interesting to see what she comes up with next.

CL Yachts CLB72 & CLA76

CL Yachts CLB72 & CLA76

The nearly 150-year-old builder launched a new luxury performance division in 2018—CL Yachts— and unveiled the CLB72 and CLA76f. The new offerings tap into current trends and take a different approach to design, materials, and innovation.

Careful engineering and extensive use of carbon fiber in the hull structure make for an exceptionally lightweight boat, which eases handling and gives a top speed of around 30 knots. The layout varies greatly between each, but both boast a full-beam amidships master and a particularly spacious engine room. The priority is given to comfort and user-friendliness is seen in the gyrostabilization, active interceptor system, and floating interior that minimizes vibration.

CLB72: 76′ 9″ LOA, 19′ 8″ beam

CLA76f:  76′ 6″ LOA, 19′ 8″ beam

clyachts.com

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Cheoy Lee Bravo 72 at MYS

See the Cheoy Lee Bravo 72 at MYS. The Bravo 72 (72′ LOA, 19’10” beam) is a blend of the top technologies found in the marine industry. Owners will appreciate the spacious layout inside with four staterooms. There is also ample deck space with an oversized, covered flybridge. Outstanding performance and fuel efficiency is a result of an optimized hull design combined with latest Volvo Penta IPS technology, advanced composite hull structure, and lightweight, honeycomb-cored interior.

Technology additions continue with a Kohler Decision-Maker 3500 auto-parallel twin-generator system providing 46kW of power automatically when required. The Volvo Penta IPS 1050 power package drives the Bravo 72 to a top speed of 28 knots, with a cruising speed of 22 knots and a 453-nm range.

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Read our full review of the Cheoy Lee Bravo 72.

Cheoy Lee Bravo 72

The only answer to any question about the brand new Cheoy Lee Bravo 72? ‘Let’s go on a sea trial.’

The SOG reads 27 knots when the captain goes in for a tight 360 outside Fort Lauderdale’s Port Everglades. Cushioned in the Stidd helm chair up top, I grip the armrests and brace myself. Surprisingly, I feel nothing. We barely lean into the curve as we make a neat, smooth turn in the choppy three-foot seas. We’re cruising on the first hull of Cheoy Lee’s Bravo 72, and while it may be just a few feet longer than the shipyard’s popular Bravo 68, it’s not an evolution or an updated model. This baby is all brand new.

“We started from scratch,” says Panu Virtanen, vice president of yacht sales and new construction for Cheoy Lee Shipyards North America. Designed around the concept of easy boating for the owner-operator, Cheoy Lee opted for the joystick-controlled Volvo Penta IPS drives for Hull No. 1.

“Volvo Penta is very strict when it comes to hull design and lamination, so they were a part of the process from the get-go,” says Virtanen. Working with Volvo, naval architect Howard Apollonio drew the optimal hull for the 800-hp IPS 1050s, which give a 28-knot top speed and 23-knot cruise.

The power plants’ petite footprints leave plenty of room for maintenance in the large engine room, but the real bestseller, according to Virtanen, is the fuel economy. Volvo-led sea trials showed some impressive figures, particularly at low speeds where a 7.5-knot cruise sips only 4.5 gallons per hour total, and that’s including both engines. At 2,000 rpm, about 22 knots, the engines burn 54 gallons per hour.

IPS also negated the need for thrusters since the pods can move the boat in any direction. “Traditional thrusters have 30 or 40 horsepower; here, we have 1,600 horsepower at your fingertips,” says Virtanen. “People never believe it. They think they can’t move sideways without a bow thruster. I have only one answer: ‘Let’s go on a sea trial.’”

Volvo Penta supplied a comprehensive system from the electronics up top to the props below, so if there is ever an issue it takes only one phone call to resolve, greatly simplifying repairs for the owner. And that’s what this yacht is all about — bringing the fun back to boating by making it easy to run and maintain. That was some of the feedback Cheoy Lee received when querying owners of the 68 and clients interested in this size range. They used their responses to craft the 72. “We tried to put in everything. We really listened to what people were looking for,” says Virtanen.

For the interior, the wish list included an open-plan main deck with 360-degree views. Counter-balanced doors lead from the congenial aft deck inside, where the salon flows seamlessly into the country galley and forward to the helm station. It is all on a single level surrounded by windows. The galley even includes refrigerator and freezer drawers instead of the traditional tall appliance that would have blocked the clear view.

With the aim of opening up each area visually, interior designer Sylvia Bolton took a less-is-more contemporary approach and employed subtle details. For example, a glass table fronts the country galley’s settee, and a streamlined helm console eschews the oversized cabinetry of the past. She also pushed bulkheads out wherever possible and masked some structural elements between the galley and salon to look like cabinets. “My most important task in this project was to truly manipulate each space to its maximum. As I jokingly say, the most expensive commodity in a yacht’s interior is air and open space,” says Bolton. She was aided by a nearly 20-foot beam, which is wider than most in this size range.

The all-around views are only briefly interrupted by a dayhead opposite the galley, but it is a convenience that was a must-have for nearly everyone Cheoy Lee consulted. There are no interior stairs to the flybridge hogging precious space. Instead, Cheoy Lee opted for one substantial staircase from the aft deck.

Below-decks, four was the magic number of staterooms that most clients requested, including—no surprise—a roomy master. Cheoy Lee came through with a full-beam king master suite. One of Bolton’s coolest tricks to increase interior volume was to open the twin sinks in the starboard-side bathroom to the stateroom, or they can be closed off with walnut-clad counter-balanced doors. The toilet compartment is private opposite the spacious shower. On the suite’s port side, a cedar loset reveals its surprising capaciousness when one peeks inside. Just outside the stateroom’s entrance is a stacked washer and dryer. For guests, there is a forward double-berth VIP with a nice-sized ensuite, and a twin and a bunk cabin that share a head.

While most owners of a 72-footer intend to drive themselves, many told Cheoy Lee that they wanted the possibility of having a day captain on occasion. Buffering the engine room and master suite, the crew quarters is a pleasant spot finished to similar standards as the guest area with a bunk, mini-galley and head.

Other bells and whistles on board include a TNT hydraulic tender lift on the swim platform, which comes standard.  It lowers to launch the tender and rises to protect it when underway. Hull No. 1 is fitted with the optional TRAC zero-speed stabilizers, but it’s also gyro-ready to accept the Seakeeper SK-16 if one desires. This hull is also home to twin Kohler generators with the Decision Maker 3500 for auto transfer and auto parallel load share—another standard feature.

The Bravo 72 is the first boat in this size range to have the sophisticated system that takes the place of expensive power management systems. The top and aft decks are well-protected from the elements and for more coverage, optional sun shades can be fitted on carbon fiber poles to canopy the foredeck lounging area.

At the end of our cruise, the captain shows off the incredible maneuverability of the pod drives as we approach the marina, deftly moving the boat sideways. But  I would be remiss if I didn’t caution would-be owners: It’s so simple, your kids will think they deserve a turn at the controls!

Cheoy Lee Bravo 72 Specifications:

LOA (exc. stern platform): 72′ Beam: 19′ 10″
Draft: 5′
Weight: 94,000 lbs.
Fuel/Water: 1,060/280 U.S. gals. Power: 2x 800-hp Volvo IPS 1050 Cruise/Top Speed: 23/28 knots Range: 400 nm @ 22 knots, 1600 nm @ 7.5 knots
MSRP: $3,850,000 base, $3,980,000 as tested
Contact: Cheoy Lee Shipyards N.A. 2955 W. State Road 84
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33312 (954) 527-0999
cheoylee.cn

By Kate Lardy, Southern Boating October 2017

Cheoy Lee Global 104

Cheoy Lee Global 104 Pilothouse

When the owner of an 84-foot Cheoy Lee returned to the yard for his next and bigger yacht, he had a long list of demands. Instead of compromising, the yard’s designers turned to naval architect Jon Overing and interior designer Sylvia Bolton to come up with something entirely new.

The result is this Global 104 Pilothouse (LOA: 103′ 10″; Beam: 22′) with unprecedented interior volume and clever design solutions that gave the owner everything on his wish list. In addition to a salon and dining area, the main deck encompasses both a large country kitchen as well as a full-beam owner’s suite with his-and-hers heads.

Up top, the spacious skylounge was designed to seat 15 around the focal point of a 75-inch television. Below-decks are four guest staterooms, with crew quarters for five aft. Drawing less than six feet for Bahamas cruising, the Global 104 has twin 1,900-hp Caterpillar C32 ACERTs that give it a swift top speed of over 25 knots.

At a more sedate 11 knots, the Global 104 can make it 2,400 nautical miles, thanks to integral fuel tanks with 5,200-gallon capacity.

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