Feb edition of MBY

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jfm

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I've found some recent issues quite good and written that on here but this month's (Feb, with XSR48 on cover) is a bit of a mixed bag...

1. Oooh, spookily, both my old boat and new boat are photoed in this issue. Old boat is to right of Nick H's on p13, ref bent biminis. New one on p54, second from right

2. The "beat credit crunch" p55 was a good article I thought - food for thought in the current economic climate.

3. Good advice from the excellent James Barke on p16 too ref the economy. If you are buying a boat, I'd strongly recommend him. Ref his 2nd last para on credit exposure, he does everything he can and what he writes in that para isn't sales talk - he actually delivers.

4. New EFI yamahas on p30 - I have ordered one of these in December - a 40hp for tender. Will report back when I've tested it

5. Nice bit by cumberlidge p39 on NW corsica. This is an utterly fab cruising ground for w med boaters but his photos don't show it well. Top of p40 there is a pic of Girolata harbour which is ok but in the same bay less than a mile away you have these much more beautiful lunch stops

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6. I enjoyed the van der valk and Mochi tests. But Alan Harper should have paid attention in geography. He says on p111 you can have late lunch in Antibes then get in your Mochi 64 which does 31knots max and be in Porto Cervo "just 4 hours later". Porto Cervo is 190nm from Antibes. Do the math Alan.

7. I was disappointed in the RIB test. They were all the popular 3.3-3.5m length, but they were all low power and either jockey console or bench/thwart seat. There was no test of a bench seating steering wheel type and nothing pokier than 20hp. I guess it's hard to source the test boats. Why not borrow from forumites MBY?

8. Tony Jones has WNS on p89 and it was ok in most respects but he completely omits checking breathing/heart on the casualty and doing chest pumps etc to keep him alive if his respiration/circulation has conked out. Tony does a fine job of saving all the fibreglass items (using ropes, naturally) but omits the most important point in saving the casualty. Seprutly he says leave the boom loose when the main has been lowered and keep the yacht pointing to wind so the boom is centred, which is nonsense cos once the sail is down you lash the boom hard with mainsheet to stop it swinging and clonking anyone.

9. The (scoop exclusive) XSMG test was a very interesting read though didn't make me want one! Lots of nice pics and info, some strange malapropisms like the turbos on the dieels forcing compressed air and fuel into the cylinders and James May thinking 2x800hp is the most powerful diesel boat money can buy(!) Also look at the pics and imagine those clean lines with a 48inch open scanner on the roof. And it seemed to have no windscreen wipers. But a v interesting read

10. Mystery skipper was better than ever before, phew!

11. Sam Newington is selling his fairline, bottom left corner of p167. Wonder what he's buying next?
 
Random thoughts: I thought the James Barke piece was the best of its type I've seen. Down to earth comments by someone who actually had something worthwhile to say.

Meanwhile, I thought the Mystery Skip read like the staffers had been given a punchline when they arrived at the MBY Christmas party and whoever came up with the best back story got it published, plus the chance to sit on Hugo's lap for the evening.

It may have reminded older readers of the venerable Frank Muir/Denis Norden radio panel game "My Word", where Frank (or Denis) would have to explain "horticulture" and would come up with a long and involved story about having two tickets to La Boheme and no-one to go with, and so calling an escort agency to supply a companion, who then spent the evening texting her friends about Celeb Big Brother, thus proving that "you can take a whore to culture. But you can't make her think".
 
:-))))) V Funny! BTW, I didn't say mys skipper was good, just that it was better than before :-)

Yep, agreed about James. He is striaght talking, down to earth and knows the business very well. The EBY team have more finger on pulse than any other UK big-boat dealers I'd say
 
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V Funny!

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I blush! I think Dorothy Parker may have made the same joke about 100 years before me.
 
You're getting carried away sir !!

Mystery Skipper had obviously been at the yuletide sloe gin and reminded himself how much he hates kids at Xmas, Bah Humbug .... Captain Pugwash provided more giggles ( and facts come to think of it).

..hadn't twigged Porto Cervo ..DOH!

Maybe another way to describe the XRS48 would have been 20 plus-ish knots faster than a Hunton, 10x the price and 10x the noise. 1/10 of the room . 1/10 of the vision ... but you get to play scrabble with the letters? Than again .. that just wouldnt have made good press would it? Having said that I read the article twice and thought the boat was drop-dead gorgeous !
 
erm, not seen it, but re the wns ...what's this about a boom in a mobo mag? Has the hapless skipper inadvertently leapt on to a saily boat this month? I spose he found it dangling on the end of one his mooring lines...
 
Yeh, the RIB test missed the point a bit. Anyone buying a 3.3-3.5m RIB as a tender is fortunate enough to own a decent sized mobo, and will therefore be more concerned about the performance of the RIB than the cost, cos they're relatively cheap anyway (in boating terms).

I know of half a dozen people who have bought this size of RIB as a tender in the last year or two, and not one of them has bought a 20hp or smaller outboard. I bought a 30 hp, Hurricane and you bought 40 hp, TCM wants 30-50hp, Magnum bought a jet rib, and I seem to remember a couple of other "how big an outboard can I fit" threads. I don't recall anyone asking for the best ploddy 15hp to fit on their 3.5m tender.
 
I'm afraid I have not renewed my sub for this year.

I enjoy the banter on this forum (and the freely offered information) but have lost interest in the mag.

I suppose the reason is that I have only a passing interest in the larger boats that feature almost continuously and find that I have only glanced at the last couple if issues.

I'll have a chat with someone on the stand at Excel next Sunday.

Ho hum, back to PBO I suppose.

Tom
 
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I have only a passing interest in the larger boats that feature almost continuously

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In fairness, MBY is the mag for larger boats, so if you only have a passing interest in them, then it's no surprise you don't enjoy the mag that much.
 
another problem Nick_H is that the market in the last years has been going in that direction only so MBY dont really have control over this
bigger and more expensive boats
really there is not much happening in the smaller sizes, compared to the bigger sizes
Sunseeker used to build 20 - 60 in the begining 90s, 35 - 84 in 2000, and 43 - 170 in 2010
for e.g. I can fill my blog with over 50% content of building over 24 metres but I have decided to leave this for Sunday/Saturday and semi production builds mostly
 
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