graemed
Member
Have just seen the launch of the first of these amazing designs. Check out the stats on their face book page. Am following with interest!
I am a fan of the Dashews also but am not sure about similarities. Both aluminium of course and both reasonably low COG but very few other similarities
Dave Martin designed "1984 - Trendsetter 40" cruise at 8 knots at 1.4 imp. gph.
A narrow beam 58 foot boat like this should not be compared to a wide beam boat of a similar length.
The total area and therefore the cost of building the hull of the Artnautica 58 would be less than the smallest Nordy especially when the reduced height is factored in.
Nordhavn produce some great boats, but they are completely different to the concept behind the Artnauitica. The latter is a much simpler boat. The aluminium hull is another major difference.
That's an added bonus too. Simplicity, out boat is pretty simple once you get to know it, when we first got our boat it seemed to complex. But we spent time on it digging though every locker, nook, cranny, and etc. Now it's simple as it was taking out our little Camano out.
It is a very interesting boat.
I am currently considering a new vessel and keeping a close eye on this one. In many ways (this and FPB) are bit of bridge between yachts and trawlers.
One thing that put me off is the number of problems that occur with a new (and especially a reasonably radical) boat. It is more reassuring that they are already on hull number 2.
Should of put length and width too, but what I'm trying to get at is, how long are you going be crossing oceans vs just cruising..
And the Nordhavn community, they're the best.
Now for the economic problem that plagues long boats: You have to pay to dock them.
Let’s keep our LRC58 in the relatively luxurious Confederation Basin, across the park from City Hall here in Kingston. This year’s seasonal slip rates are $216 a metre, so we’re paying $3850 a year to moor our motor yacht. If we chose, instead, to buy an 11 metre trawler with the same displacement and the same usable living volume, we’d be paying $2375 a year.
So the LRC58 costs an extra $1475 a year in dockage (luxury dockage, in the heart of downtown) compared to her short, fat counterpart. That’s a fair bit to me, but it’s peanuts in the context of half-million dollar boats.
More importantly, though, it’s only about 1000 nautical miles worth of the difference in fuel costs between the LRC58 and the 11 metre trawler with the same livable volume at the same cruise speed. (Our example trawler, which shall remain nameless, burns about 14 litres per hour at 7 knots.)
The extra docking costs of the LRC58 are nullified by the fuel savings if I were to do only four runs a year from Kingston to Toronto or Niagara, a leisurely passage of about 250 miles round trip. If I were to take her out the St. Lawrence to the Maritimes, paying for dockage by the foot along the way, the Artnautica would be financially ahead of the trawler before we reached John’s home base in Nova Scotia.