test report - Sea Ventures
Transcription
test report - Sea Ventures
Jeanneau Velasco 37F 66 May 2015 BOAT TEST Length (LOA): 11.43m / 37ft 5in Beam: 3.84m / 12ft 7in Displacement: 8271kg Fuel capacity: 800 litres Water capacity: 330 litres RCD category: B Engines as tested: Twin Volvo Penta D4 300 diesels Other engine options: None Price from £242,149 Motorboat Owner © Digital Marine Media Ltd 67 “The 37F is a tradtional flybridge with some trawleresque features” The side door is an excellent feature, and the flybridge offers some versatile seating and lounging options including the infill above A s IPS finds its way onto ever smaller boats, and outdrives are getting fitted to increasingly larger vessels, that old stalwart, the sub 40 foot shaft drive flybridge cruiser is getting slowly squeezed out. That makes the Jeanneau Velasco 37F something of a rare breed, a new launch into the entry level flybridge sector, propelled by good old fashioned shafts. The original Velasco, the 43, was a trawler type flybridge with reverse sheer windscreen. The F suffix denotes a more traditional style of flybridge boat and the 37F is the second boat in the range following on from the 43F. Despite its more conventional design, the 37F has retained a couple of the more practical trawler type elements, as you’ll see as we go on. access to both of the engine’s raw water strainers. Three mirror tinted glass panels, one fixed and two sliding, separate the cockpit from the accommodation. Inside you get a galley up and aft configuration, with the galley to port and a U shaped dinette to starboard. The dinette will comfortably seat four around a large table. There is storage under the starboard seat, and a smart drinks cabinet arrangement under the aft cushion. This is held up when in use by a gas strut. In the floor, in between dinette and galley, is a single large lifting section that provides access to the engines. This hatch is quite heavy and cumbersome and, on our test boat, was not fixed in place with hinges or supported by gas struts. This made it a two person job to lift and replace. Access to the port engine is simple, but to get at the starboard one you need to drop down and The flybridge steps are easily ascended with plenty to grab hold of as you go crouch beneath the dinette. Entry onto the boat is over a wide bathing platform that houses a concealed bathing ladder. There is a gate on either side of the transom seating, which makes boarding from either side just as easy even if the platform is obstructed by a tender. The transom seat contains two storage lockers at either end and a single bottle gas locker in the middle. In the cockpit floor there is a large lazarette with easy 68 May 2015 Motorboat Owner © Digital Marine Media Ltd 69 The helm is well laid out, with room to add a decent set of electronics The galley is simple and practical. The limited storage is supplemented by a huge floor locker The galley looks to be eminently practical with a single deep sink, a double gas hob with a gas oven below, and a built in fridge at the forward end. Storage is adequate, with two drawers in the galley and a single cupboard that is given over entirely to a built in rubbish bin. This is supplemented by some crockery storage in the unit beneath the navigator’s seat just in front of the galley. On top of this there is another hatch in the floor, forward of the engine hatch, which provides access to A family sized dinette can be converted into an extra double berth, with curtains all round for privacy 70 May 2015 a large locker that, being more central to the boat, would be great for storing heavy galley stores and equipment. The hob and sink are supplied with covers to keep the galley looking neat and tidy when not in use and to provide extra work surface. These heavy covers are loose fitting, so there may be potential for them to jump out and cause damage if caught out in heavy seas. This whole area has lots of glass for a great view out, but all of it can be curtained off if you decide to use the dinette as an extra sleeping area. There is also a curtain just behind the helm that sections the saloon off from the rest of the boat for added privacy. Moving forward and you have a single forward facing navigators seat to port and a large bench helm seat to starboard. This bench seat is capable of taking up to three people, which means the 37F delivers proper forward facing seating for four down below. That’s not something you see on many boats, especially those below Motorboat Owner © Digital Marine Media Ltd 40 feet. Next to the helm is one of those trawleresque features that I mentioned earlier, a half height sliding door to provide easy deck access from the helm. This will be a real bonus for those helming shorthanded, or even just to help with crew communications. The bench seat has a lifting bolster to ease passage in and out of the boat via this door. The helm is simple and practical with lots of room for additional instruments and a decent sized multi-function display. The helm seat has a lifting bolster to allow access to the side door, or a perched driving position 71 Headroom in the mid cabin is excellent for a boat of this style and size Space in the forward cabin is great, partly thanks to the innovative extending bed A couple of steps down the companionway, aided by a nice leather clad grab rail, and you have the main cabin forward, a guest cabin to starboard and a toilet and shower to port. In the forward cabin, with the door shut behind you, there is an uncharacteristically large amount of standing space at the foot of the double berth. This is because Jeanneau has incorporated a clever extending aft end to the bed. As it is, the berth is just under 6ft in length but, if you want it to be a bit longer, the end just pulls out to provide another seven inches or so that are filled in with some additional cushions. Even with the bed extended, the space in this cabin is very good, plus there is 6ft 3in of standing headroom. Storage is supplied by a half height hanging locker to starboard and a large locker underneath the aft end of the berth. This locker is easily accessed by lifting the end of the bed, which is on gas struts and stays open on its own, leaving your hands free to pack away or rummage at your leisure. Two side windows and an overhead hatch provide plenty of natural light and two opening ports within the side windows deliver ventilation when required. One unusual aspect of the 37F is that there is no en-suite access from the main cabin, but this is more than made up for by the extra room this has provided in the toilet compartment. The guest cabin has two single bunks which are generous in their length, at 6ft 6in, although a little tight on the width at around 2ft. For a side cabin it feels spacious and the headroom is very good, with over 6ft at the forward end, dropping to 6ft as you step down between the bunks, and still over 4 foot in the remainder of the cabin. A hanging locker, small ottoman between the berths and some under bunk lockers provide the mid 72 May 2015 cabin’s storage. Between the bunks the floor panels lift out to gain access to the bilge area. The cabin has a small window with an integral opening port, but still manages to feel light and airy. The toilet compartment, opposite the guest cabin, again offers lots of space and over 6ft headroom. There is a nice deep sink and two cupboards. It has a separate shower cubicle with a fold down seat. This cubicle is a little tight, so you have to lift the seat to get in and shut the door, but still manages to offer decent headroom. Gaining access to the flybridge is via a There is no ensuite access, but the lack of a second door has allowed Jeanneau to make better use of the space available Motorboat Owner © Digital Marine Media Ltd 73 Twin D4 300’s deliver 26-27 knots top speed, and comfortable cruising in the low 20’s PERFORMANCE As tested 40% fuel 50% water 5 crew Force 3 RPM Idle 700 rpm 1000 1500 2000 2500 2750 3000 3600 set of steps. This might sound like a retrograde move but these are not the near vertical steps flybridge boats used to have. These are more like a set of stairs, with the bonus of not obscuring the helmsman’s vision aft from the lower driving position. There is plenty to grab hold of while ascending, and also while transcending between steps and flybridge at the top. Up on the flybridge the 37F delivers a flexible seating/lounging arrangement. The large aft sun pad has a section that lifts to create the backrest for the aft section of dinette seating. The back rest of the forward dinette seat flips to offer two forward facing positions. An infill here turns these into two forward facing loungers, and the single helm seat swivels Knots LPH GPH MPG 4.2 5.8 7.6 9.2 13.1 16.3 18.9 25.8 0.66 1.08 3.08 6.82 12.1 15.2 17.6 24.9 6.36 3.0 4.9 14.0 31.0 55.0 69.0 80.0 113.0 5.37 2.47 1.35 1.08 1.07 1.07 1.04 Range Noise (nm) 1119 64 945 434 237 190 188 188 183 68 70 76 79 81 83 86 to be part of the social scene when in port or at anchor. All three sections of the dinette seating offers under cushion storage. The side decks on the 37F are reminiscent of those found on the small Merry Fisher range. The starboard one is wide and sunken with knee high gunwales topped with guardrails up to hip height. There is a step up just forward of the helm to bring you onto the foredeck level. The port side deck is at foredeck level all the way back to the cockpit and is a little 74 May 2015 “The 37F delivers a good, solid, old school, kind of driving experience” narrower, but still sports a raised toe rail and guardrails to above knee height. Both side decks are illuminated, plus there are well positioned grab rails on both aft corners of the wheelhouse, as well as down both sides. While the starboard deck will be the deck of choice when moving forward, the port one is still as good, or even better, than those found on similar sized boats, so you won’t feel obliged to moor starboard side to. Up front, the foredeck is easily worked and a large, deep anchor locker is compartmentalised to offer a separate section for storing fenders Motorboat Owner © Digital Marine Media Ltd or ropes, without getting them tangled up in the anchor chain. The foredeck cabin roof is equipped with two large sun pads. The aft end of each of these lifts and fixes in place, so that sun worshippers can lounge in a semi upright position. Underway The lower helm position offers good visibility for a flybridge boat with few blind spots, thanks largely to the use of low level fixtures in the cabin and the open stairs to the flybridge. The curtain behind the helm, used to section off the saloon when being used as a berth, does provide an obstruction to visibility behind, when looking over your right shoulder, but it can be easily moved if required. The bench seat feels a little too distant from the helm so I found myself perching on the edge rather than being able 75 to sit back. This was also necessary to reach the throttles, which were otherwise too far away. I actually found the driving position better if I raised the seat bolster and drove the boat in a semi standing stance where everything fell a bit easier to hand. Being slightly higher this also improved visibility forward as the bow was rising onto the plane. The steering wheel is fixed but felt well placed when driving in either position. The flybridge driving position was excellent and delivered just the right amount of wind in your hair without feeling like you are being blown away. Performance wise the 37F delivers a solid ride, typical of a shaft drive flybridge boat of this size. You don’t get the same levels of excitement that an IPS or stern drive boat will deliver, but rather a performance how it used to be, and how many people still like it to be. It reminded me very much of one of my all time favourite flybridge boats at this size, the Sealine F37. The 37F is no rocket ship. In these days where boats don’t seem to be The foredeck sun pads have raised backrests, perfect for those long summer days at anchor allowed off the production line unless they can achieve 30 knots, it was refreshing to find Jeanneau were very happy that this boat tops out at 27 knots with the twin D4 300’s (we achieved just shy of 26). They seem to have realised that few people cruise at such high speeds and have delivered a boat that will cruise happily, and comfortably, in the low 20’s, but will also deliver a very good ride right down to about 14 knots, perfect for those who are in no rush and another nod to the Velasco’s trawler heritage. It does seem to need most of its 600hp to maintain a 20+ knots cruise, which may seem surprising seeing as how the Sealine achieved 30 knots with a pair of 260’s, but when you look at the weight and beam, you realise that the F37 and the 37F are actually rather different animals. The Velasco carries an extra 371kg and provides an extra two inches on the beam. The latter may not sound much, but it feels very noticeable with the spaciousness of the boat’s interior and, in my opinion, more than makes up for the odd knot or two off the top end. Conclusion To sum up, the 37F is a solid, practical, old school kind of boat, with some modern design twists. If you are after a new, sub 40 foot, flybridge on shafts, which seems to have become a bit of a niche market, it offers good value for money at under £250k, or a little over if you add the Premiere pack that includes that very useful side door. The starboard side deck offers a very secure way forward, and the port one is also eminently usable ENQUIRIES: Sea Ventures (UK) Ltd 01489 565444 www.sea-ventures.co.uk Brokerage, New and Used Jeanneau Yachts & Motor Boats & After Sales Swanwick Marina, Swanwick Shore Road, Swanwick, Hampshire SO31 1ZL 76 May 2015 01489 565444 www.sea-ventures.co.uk