The Fairmile style would be my choice. An ageless style and grace that will never be outdated while having enough practical features to be interesting to the eye. They are capable and comfortable passage makers too.
Is the attachment 46295 the Cammenga Atlantic 72.
Thats the one everybody's Ga Ga over right? Well I'm Ga Ga too
BUT ..it's not perfect.
1. The shape of the stern is too close to part of a sphere. Perhaps it would look better if it had a reverse curve stem like many Dutch boats. Perhaps it needs to be more elliptical or perhaps I just can't see the stern well enough. The stern on my Willard 30 is more attractive and I consider it average for the type.
My favorite Trawler is the Nordhavn 46 and it's stern is even less attractive.
Come to think of it the only stern I can think of (and I have a pic) that I like that would be suitable for the type is on this Garden designed wood trawler that stopped in Thorne Bay 2yrs ago.
2. The other thing I don't like is those slanted upper deck posts. They have become vogue and I consider them trite (visually). Ther'e slab like too. Two inch ss stanchion tubes slanted but slanted less would look better and allow the
sheer line and upper deck line to dominate the midship lines as they should.
Easy Rider
Most probably I will put a 80 liter Grenaa Diesel in a boat of such size. That is a Danish make and the price is not German either..............500.000 US$ per piece!!! But they last forever and run on everything that looks a bit oily. TBO 15.000hrs......
Regards
Richard
In my opinion, definitely not. Her hull form is not suitable, her house is not protected enough and she has does not have enough fuel for island hopping the Pacific.I'm no expert on cruising the world in a small power cruiser but I think the Defever 15m Offshore Cruiser, with 1400gals of diesel could Island hop the Pacific and would be a suitable boat and, to me...They look good too![]()
Like I said in my post, I'm no expert on what "I" term, small cruisers, I'm more used to crossing oceans on ships with a 14,000HP, or larger, twin aposed Duxford engine but...I do like the look of a DeFeverIn my opinion, definitely not. Her hull form is not suitable, her house is not protected enough and she has does not have enough fuel for island hopping the Pacific.
The Defever is a great coastal cruiser very suitable for going to the Carib from North America or Indonesia from Australia. Crossing the Atlantic would be a crap shoot.
Throttled way back to around 6.5 knots or so you can probably get to Hawaii and the weather along the southern route is generally good. But, How are you going to return?As to the 15m DeFever I mentioned, not having enough diesel to Island hop the Pacific, 1400 US gallons = 5,299.6 liters! I feel 4,000 liters would be enough to Island hop, holding 1,299.6 liters in reserve. But...As Hawaii is 2390 miles from California, I could well be wrong about thatStill...One could carry extra diesel in 44gal drums on deck
Just my 2c worth on a safe blue water powerboat![]()
RHP,
I thought I was harsh on the cat man but you don't hold back at all.
I was critical of the Cammenga like someone that said Farah Fawcet had 14 too many eye lashes. Just saying the stern wasn't quite right and showing a boat that had a good stern. The saying "beauty is in the eye of the beholder" is misleading, evasive and simply not true. The ability to know beauty is to observe, consider, analyze and compare over a long period of time. To interact heavily in the company of those that DO know beauty is probably the fastest road to knowing it yourself. DNA may play a part in it but I think it is mostly learned. Form follows function but the resulting form may NOT be beautiful.
But it may perform it's function beautifully.
The definition of design is "An organized solution to a problem" There is nothing in the definition about beauty.