Carsten64
Member
Good morning, i am Carsten from Germany, livelong sailor and boat owner but now i need some advive to focus or sort out some ideas. I sail a nice 44 ft aluminium boat with mid cockpit an a solid doghous, similar to a Amel. Its 4o years old, no teak and a 2 cyl Sabb engine with 28 hp. I sailed from the baltic to the Med, lifed 2 years on board an the last 10 years we spent 7 months in the greece islands. So far so good....now we have the funds to move ahead. I dont want to go bigger with sail because already now 100 sqm handling with 2 in Meltemi 40 kn is critical if something unforseen happens. Add i hate to look at windy to find the right wind to sail the next 50 nm and allways the wind is increasing to 35 kn instead of 15-20 or sleeping. Actually i prefer to travel with calm condition and spent weeks at anchor an go wingfoiling or paddling etc. so a Trawler is the next one , but which one / size/ engine etc.
I can spent 1 mio eur and will kept the boat for ever
I visited a dashew fpb 64 ( 2 mio and not for the Med), a Nordhavn 47 ( too tall), a selene 54 ( nice) and looking at some dutch steel boats. Before i bought my aluminium boat i had some nogos : no steel, no teak, no turbo and electronic engine, no queensize island bed better a two real tweind or a kingsize. All this was managed and for us a very good decision.
But now with trawler my head is circling: dutch steel often with teak but often nicely shipy built with good plumbing ie rigid piping instead of hoses, diesel furnace, double windows but 90% are design for inland use with many coffetables and round sofas, small galley and storage etc and the good ones are often 40 year old too. There are sometimes older moonen, lowland or even a feadship available with a refit but still they are steel and mostly teak...
Nordhavn 57 / 62 are often without RCD cert and due to the engines difficult to import, the 62 has too many staterooms and the ER is cramped. Although the hull etc is good i dont think their electric and plumbing is not as good as their marketing. its like boating but not ship or yacht standard. very simple shaft system without thrust bearings, simple stuffing box , all plumbing done with hoses, only a few with diesel furnace, allways very small beds queen island everywhere and they try to keep prices very high
Selene , seems interesting, lower profile, often twin engines in europe, CE rated, with twins quite narrow engine room, the 54 or 59 looks good. maybe some cosmetic issues . not sure about built quaöity in 2005 to 2010
Fleming 55, like the pilothouse, dont like the too big engines , but installation much better than NH or selene with seatorq etc. nice low cg . I like to do maintenace myself but i am afraid of such engines, would like some smaller easier to work on ( a fleming with a gardner.... )
we like to travel and life 7 month on board and stay at anchor 95 % of time. last year we had 4 days in the marina and the rest at anchor in greece. cruising grounds we like to expand and travel again up to the baltic and arround UK , Norway and maybe iceland. I still dont want to exclude a transatlantic trip so tankage should be well ahead 2000 nm.
as all boat we are looking at will be approx 10 to 20 years old a lot can go wrong. Additionaly the marina berting at Atlantic, UK , baltic can be tricky but i do not think a trawler smaller 50 is realy seaworthy if compared with my sailing boat, and i know that shit happens even with all the forecast. i def do not want to reduce the safety i feel now on my boat.
Long story but i assume here a sailors who did the same move with all the pros and cons and can add their experience. Carsten
I can spent 1 mio eur and will kept the boat for ever
I visited a dashew fpb 64 ( 2 mio and not for the Med), a Nordhavn 47 ( too tall), a selene 54 ( nice) and looking at some dutch steel boats. Before i bought my aluminium boat i had some nogos : no steel, no teak, no turbo and electronic engine, no queensize island bed better a two real tweind or a kingsize. All this was managed and for us a very good decision.
But now with trawler my head is circling: dutch steel often with teak but often nicely shipy built with good plumbing ie rigid piping instead of hoses, diesel furnace, double windows but 90% are design for inland use with many coffetables and round sofas, small galley and storage etc and the good ones are often 40 year old too. There are sometimes older moonen, lowland or even a feadship available with a refit but still they are steel and mostly teak...
Nordhavn 57 / 62 are often without RCD cert and due to the engines difficult to import, the 62 has too many staterooms and the ER is cramped. Although the hull etc is good i dont think their electric and plumbing is not as good as their marketing. its like boating but not ship or yacht standard. very simple shaft system without thrust bearings, simple stuffing box , all plumbing done with hoses, only a few with diesel furnace, allways very small beds queen island everywhere and they try to keep prices very high
Selene , seems interesting, lower profile, often twin engines in europe, CE rated, with twins quite narrow engine room, the 54 or 59 looks good. maybe some cosmetic issues . not sure about built quaöity in 2005 to 2010
Fleming 55, like the pilothouse, dont like the too big engines , but installation much better than NH or selene with seatorq etc. nice low cg . I like to do maintenace myself but i am afraid of such engines, would like some smaller easier to work on ( a fleming with a gardner.... )
we like to travel and life 7 month on board and stay at anchor 95 % of time. last year we had 4 days in the marina and the rest at anchor in greece. cruising grounds we like to expand and travel again up to the baltic and arround UK , Norway and maybe iceland. I still dont want to exclude a transatlantic trip so tankage should be well ahead 2000 nm.
as all boat we are looking at will be approx 10 to 20 years old a lot can go wrong. Additionaly the marina berting at Atlantic, UK , baltic can be tricky but i do not think a trawler smaller 50 is realy seaworthy if compared with my sailing boat, and i know that shit happens even with all the forecast. i def do not want to reduce the safety i feel now on my boat.
Long story but i assume here a sailors who did the same move with all the pros and cons and can add their experience. Carsten

