As opposed to a Fleming where the side supports really complement the whole look of the boat in my opinion.
A few years ago I posted how I changed my style boards.
A few years ago I posted how I changed my style boards.
To be fair, it is really a difficult job to get everything right proportionally on a 36' cruising boat. Because head room and accommodations have to be in line height wise as say a 42' boat, the 36 will usually look a little more ungainly.
Wouldn't it look like the IG 32 Europa?When Eric mentioned the Europa without the style boards, I got to wondering what one would look like with just standard post-type supports.
I had the opportunity to go aboard Ray's GB42 Saturday evening and found the solution to the 36's busy interior. 6 more feet of space relaxed the entire feel of what I felt was a busy interior on the 36. The extra beam helped too.
... The other thing I have an issue w is the imitation "smoke stack". I just despise them. Tacked on imitation things are sooo tacky and lacking class I would immediately remove the thing if I was lucky enough to ever get a NT. I really love them ... the boat.
...A year or so ago, another guy with a Manatee was kicking around the idea of extending his hardtop over the boat deck, and asked me to Photoshop some Europa style boards as supports. After he saw the outcome, he abandoned the idea.
One thing that might or might not be important to a potential buyer is that a Grand Banks, at least in the smaller 32 and 36 sizes, is a VERY wet boat in quartering seas with a wind, which there usually is if there are waves. The Kenneth Smith-designed hull has very little flare in the forebody (see photo) so what happens is that quartering waves whack against the side of the hull and shoot straight up. With hardly any flare the water continues up past the gunwale and into the air at which point the wind pushes all of it onto the boat and into the windows.
On the subject of boat appearance, and acknowledging that aesthetics are totally subjective, of the deFever designs I don't like any of them except the deFever 46. The non-raised pilothouse-style boats like the 48 TO ME are very run-of-the-mill, plain-Jane designs. They have no features of particular interest, the flying bridge is awkwardly positioned, at least on the 48, and there are other things about the one-level designs I don't care for.
The DeFever pilohouse boats, on the other hand, particularly the 46' which I think hits the proportions just right, are outstanding to my way of thinking.
But actually I don't think even any of the branded deFever pilothouse designs get it quite right.
That's a point that so many people miss...."the preferred use of the boat." In other words, "the Mission." I had pretty much the same things in mind when I bought my boat and one of them was "how friendly is the cockpit for fishing?"Since I like to fish, the covered cockpit of the Europa wouldn't be a good fit with my preferred boat use.
He said essentially the same thing that you do, that the lack of flare forward made them very, very wet boats.
Scott Welch
Island Eagle
So, for pilothouses, the DeFever/Alaskan 46 begat the DeFever 42 (steel, Mexico),
But that is a minor sacrifice we both gladly accept in return for a nice, wide, full-walkaround deck.
The main drawback to the GB36 Europa is that just about all of them have only the one stateroom up forward and one head. While we rarely allow other people on board our boat we do have certain friends we take out, sometimes for a couple of weeks. For this, the tri-cabin is the far superior configuation in the GB36 because it gives each couple their own stateroom and head separated by the main cabin. So someone can get up, make coffee, go for a walk, read, whatever, without disturbing anyone else.
.
We all now know that your boat only drinks 6 if the other 5 bring their own drinks!