Marlow Pilot 31: Downeast Dream

Marlow’s entry-level cruiser, the new Marlow Pilot 31, is designed for comfortable cruising for a couple or a small family. The newly designed pilothouse, which now includes the galley and dinette, is protected from the weather by a hardtop overhead and large windows on both sides; Eisenglass can be rolled down aft for a full enclosure. The cabin below offers 6′ 3″ standing headroom, sleeps two in a queen berth and two more in a settee that can be converted into upper and lower berths.

The Marlow Pilot 31 replaces the 30 Pilot and is the third new model since David Marlow bought Mainship four years ago. It reflects quality and design changes, with more features at an affordable price. The new “summer galley” in the pilothouse includes a fridge/freezer, electric cooktop, microwave, and stainless sink. It is just behind the helm seat on the starboard side and faces an L-shaped settee with a dining table to port. A jump seat is just behind the galley. Below, a single seat is built in next to the queen berth. There’s also a good-sized hanging locker and a large head with separate shower. A single Yanmar 220-hp diesel engine produces a cruising speed of 18 to 20 knots and a top speed of 23 knots. A bow thruster is standard. marlow-pilot.com

Legacy 36

Tartan Marine relaunched the Legacy brand 18 months ago with the original Legacy 32 and Legacy 38. Now Tartan has just finished the new Legacy 36, the first Legacy built in Tartan’s Ohio factory. The new 36 was designed by Mark Ellis, who designed the original Legacy, Tim Jackett, Tartan’s COO and designer and the Tartan design team. The Legacy 36 uses Ellis’ modified deep-V hull with wide chine flats running aft so the boat comes up on plane at low speeds. The V entry helps produce a dry and stable ride. A running keel and skeg protect the prop and the skeg-hung rudder. The Downeast appeal shows in the Legacy’s traditional shear line, raked transom, bow flare, and graceful tumblehome.

The Legacy 36 has a large, self-bailing cockpit with an aft settee and two other seats flanking the entrance to the helmdeck, which is enclosed aft with curved plexiglass and a Sapelle-framed sliding door. The captain and mate have pedestal-mounted swivel chairs; the settees convert to a berth.

Owners can choose a galley down and one cabin arrangement or galley up with a second cabin below. The private master stateroom is forward with a large queen-sized island berth. The head is to starboard with a stall shower. Standard power is a Cummins 480-hp diesel.

legacy.tartanyachts.com 

Back Cove 32: an Eastern Classic

It’s been ten years since Back Cove launched its first boat, a 29-foot single-engine diesel designed to make cruising easy. Since then, Back Cove, a sister company to Sabre Yachts, has built 700 boats ranging from 26 to 41 feet long, but all still single-diesel, fuel-efficient, low-maintenance, Maine-built cruising boats.The latest, the Back Cove 32, is scheduled to launch this summer and remains true to the company’s core values.

The Back Cove 32 combines traditional Downeast looks with comfort, functionality and smart use of space. A centerline transom door leads from the swim platform to the cockpit, and it’s all one level from there to the companionway. Matching L-shaped settees are in the corners of the cockpit, and a generous-sized optional hardtop protects the helm deck.

A galley with an electric, two-burner cooktop, fridge/freezer, stainless sink, and microwave is to starboard. To port, a U-shaped settee can be used as a dinette with a table or converted to a sleeping area. The cabin has an elegant cherry interior with satin varnish, and a large island berth is located in the bow. A head with toilet is to port; a separate shower stall is to starboard. Standard power is either a 370-hp Volvo or 370-hp Yanmar diesel. Base price $320,000.

backcoveyachts.com


 

Hinckley 34R

The newest model from Hinckley, a 34-foot runabout, (Hinckley 34R)  is the newest in the iconic builder’s line of elegant, classic, Maine-built boats that almost define the Downeast aesthetic. Over the years, Hinckley has managed to blend the latest in hull design and performance with its boats’ gorgeous lines to create an American boating success story.
Indeed, Hinckley just launched its 1,000th jet-powered boat, a trend that started with the often-imitated Picnic Boat in 1994. In looks and in performance, the new Hinckley 34R, with twin 320-hp Yanmar diesels and Alamarin jetdrives, lives up to its heritage. The Hinckley 34R (for runabout) is designed as a dayboat. Board the boat via the integrated swim platform and a boarding door to the sunpad, and a centerline walkway.

There’s plenty of seating all around, with a U-shaped settee in the middle of the boat surrounding a teak table on a pedestal. The helm features an array of classic analog gauges. A folding teak door leads to the cabin, with small facing settees on each side and a head with toilet, sink and shower in the bow. The Hinckley 34R’s tumblehome is classic Hinckley, as are the flowing lines of the teak-capped, wraparound windshield. It cruises at 31 knots and tops out at 34. Jetstick controls make maneuvering fingertip easy. hinckleyyachts.com

Bruckmann Abaco 40

They don’t come much more traditional—or much better looking—than the Bruckmann Abaco 40, a single-diesel, straightforward, solid Downeast boat with elegant fit and finish. Built by Bruckmann Yachts near Toronto, Canada, and designed by Mark Ellis, the Abaco 40 is a single-stateroom cruiser with a Herreshoff interior and flowing lines that turns heads anywhere she goes. From the cockpit, you enter the fully enclosed salon/helm deck through two sliding doors.

Bruckmann is a traditional sailboat builder, and the sailing lineage shows in the Abaco 40’s simplicity. The salon has two bench-type settees facing each other with a table in the middle—they convert to berths if needed. Matching Stidd helm and passenger seats are forward, and large windows provide excellent visibility all around. All the wood is exquisitely joined mahogany. There are no frills here, just seven coats of varnish. Down three steps a U-shaped galley is to port, with a large head and shower to starboard. A centerline berth is forward. Ellis designed the hull with fairly flat aft sections and broad chine flats for stability. A sizable skeg and rudder protect the single prop and help with tracking. Bow and stern thrusters are optional. A 670-hp Cummins produces a cruising speed of 24 knots and a top speed of about 28 knots.

bruckmannyachts.com

Hunt Harrier 25 Sport

This beauty handles like a high-end performance race car.

The only problem with the new Hunt Harrier 25 Sport—and this is a serious one—is that it’s addictive. Once you climb behind the custom wooden wheel and nudge the throttle forward, the boat just comes up on plane —no hump, no bump…nothing but steady power and speed. The mid-range acceleration is simply outstanding, and when you carve the first turn, it’s so much fun that you want to carve another, and then another. This latest Hunt is a combination of a Porsche 911 and the Energizer Bunny. The performance is so exhilarating that you just want to stay behind the wheel and keep on going. The fact that it’s a Hunt, with a C. Raymond Hunt deep-V hull and blue-water pedigree, is just icing on the cake.

The first thing I noticed about the new Harrier 25 Sport is the very cool-looking windshield. Somehow it’s a combination of classic/retro and high-tech, all wrapped into one. “We spent a lot of time on this,” said Peter Van Lancker as he put down a chamois while we talked. The hands-on company president was helping to wash the boat before our sea trial.

[photomosaic ids=”5991,5992,5993,5994,5995″]

Even though it’s owned by ScoutPartners—the same company that bought Hinckley Yachts a few years ago—Hunt still defines its own corporate culture by doing one thing, and they do it very well. They build a relatively small number of semi-custom New England-styled boats from 25 to 80 feet that are all designed by C. Raymond Hunt Associates using the performance, sea-conquering principles and deep-V hull developed by the legendary Ray Hunt more than 50 years ago. In case you missed this part of yachting history, Ray Hunt designed the iconic Bertram 31, the legendary Boston Whaler 13 and 17, and in his spare time, the Concordia yawl, arguably one of the prettiest sailboats of all time. All that goes to say that Hunt builds boats that are meant to be classics—not a lot of frills or bells and whistles here. These are solid ocean-going performers that will take you out⎯and bring you back⎯no matter what the conditions are off shore. That’s not to say that Hunt yachts don’t have a lot of built-in luxury and technology when appropriate. It’s just that with Hunt, first things come first.

As we headed down Narragansett Bay toward Newport, it was easy to see that the new Harrier 25 Sport takes advantage of its heritage. Indeed, it has the same hull with 24-degree deadrise at the transom as all previous Harriers. “We’ve built probably 1,000 Harriers,” Van Lancker said as we cruised into a 15-knot headwind. “We know we have a successful hull. What’s new is the style of the boat.” Above the waterline, Hunt redesigned the boat starting with its aggressive composite windshield and ending with the 3×7-foot sunpad in back, above the 380-hp Volvo gas engine (an upgrade from 320-hp gas Volvo that’s standard), paired to an OceanX stern drive. “We put the engine in back for better balance,” Van Lancker said. “And there’s no engine box.” There is, however, a supersized wraparound six-person back seat that starts behind the passenger seat on the port side and ends at the new wet bar with sink and fridge just aft of the driver’s seat on the starboard side—a great place for a group of friends or family to relax.

The real news about the Harrier 25 Sport is that less is more. There’s no exterior teak here. The boat is made to be used and enjoyed. “It’s a wash-and-wear boat,” Van Lancker says. Not even the wide swim platform is teak. Instead, it’s fiberglass with synthetic teak inserts. The cuddy cabin, which has a convertible V-berth and a manual head, has a faux teak and holly sole. All this adds up to a boat that manages to keep its traditional Down East looks while requiring minimal exterior maintenance. It can serve variously as a sport boat, a fishing boat, an overnighter, or as a water sports platform (it even has a retractable water ski pylon), and then you can put it away.

We were on Hull #1, so we wanted to see how the boat would perform. With three people on board and half a tank of fuel, we registered 41.5 knots going into the headwind at 5,250 rpm. But more than that, the attitude of the boat and the cruising comfort were remarkable, even in less-than-ideal conditions. “Look,” said Kristan McClintock, Hunt’s marketing director who was sitting all the way aft. “I’m perfectly dry.” Indeed, there was no spray or water anywhere inside the boat, a remarkable performance considering the 15-knot headwind. The boat’s flared bow, lifting strakes and hard chines managed to deflect all the spray. Turning around and going downwind we picked up another 1.2 knots of speed, but the comfort level remained the same. I put the boat through a series of tight turns at speed, and Volvo’s twin, three-bladed counter-rotating props did their thing, biting in, responding instantly to the throttle. Over the years I’ve driven Hunts from the Florida Keys up to the Reversing Falls at the top of the Bay of Fundy in Saint John, New Brunswick, so I pretty much knew what to expect. Still, the Harrier 25 Sport’s performance was both impressive and memorable. I definitely did not want to go back to the dock.

Hunt offers a variety of engine options on this boat, from the standard 320-hp Volvo gas stern drive up to a 430-hp Volvo gas stern drive, a 300-hp Volvo diesel stern drive or even a 300-hp Yamaha outboard. With any of these, you know you’re getting one of the most time-tested hulls in the world. But with the new Harrier 25 Sport, you also know you’ll be getting time to use and enjoy the boat. It’s a different approach, but if the idea is to maximize the fun time and to minimize the not-so fun time, it’s definitely the way to go.

By Peter A. Janssen, Southern Boating December 2014

Duffy 29H

Duffy 29H

Duffy hulls have been wholly proven over the years. Often described as boats with great seakeeping abilities, this line of lobster-boat-inspired cruisers is built by the Atlantic Boat Company of Brooklin, Maine, although it owes its name to the firm Duffy and Duffy Custom Yachts, which constructed the boats up until 1995. Customers range from commercial fishermen to liveaboard cruisers, and many Duffy models are built to meet a buyer’s specific requirements.

This new 29H is based on the Duffy 26, but the hull has been extended and outboards have replaced the inboard engine. The result is a larger cockpit since the engine box has been removed along with the convenience and efficiency of outboard propulsion. The hull design remains essentially the same, with a deep forefoot at the bow that offers a soft entry and a modified keel and lifting rails to provide a planing stern. Available with single or twin outboards, the 29H offers the same soft ride as the 26 at cruising speeds of 18 to 28 knots. It can serve as either a great runabout or an overnighter cruiser as there’s a fully enclosed cabin with V-berth and optional enclosed head. Base price is attractive at $169,000. atlanticboat.com

By Jeanne Craig, Southern Boating August 2013

Exit mobile version