henryf
Well-Known Member
It's fantastic.
Henry
Henry
I though the squad 42 was a forward gally (or at least the last one I skippered was)
Er why are they mutually exclusive? We've got both on our boat and they work together very well. A boat of the size of the P68 should have internal stairs to the flybridge wherever the galley is located. Good review though. Personally I feel that there should be a way of shutting off the galley from the rest of the saloon either with fixed or sliding partitions. The P68 is going to be crew operated and the owner is not going to want to sit in his saloon watching his crew do the washing up. A partition would also give some privacy to the saloon seating area from people gawping from the quay when moored stern to and provide a location for more storage which looks a bit lacking in the P68 galley.In answer to Hurricane I think the aft galley is actually better than internal stairs.
Actually my point was that it would benefit from a partition at the forward end of the galley. This would give some privacy to anybody seated in the main saloon seating area on the port side. As you know well enough, when you're moored stern to, people strolling on the quay just love to stop and gawp seemingly oblivious to the privacy of anybody inside the boat! A partition would also give a location for some overhead storage which does seem to be lacking in the P68's galleyI don't fully agree Deleted User's point that an aft galley needs some enclosing.
Yeah I know but you tend not to see it at this size of boat. Its almost as if the designers just plonk a forward facing bench in the cockpit without any thought@Deleted User, aft facing built in seating on the lower aft deck is done often by IT builders: Canados, Sanlorenzo, Pershing have been doing it for years. Bart's Blue Angel has it. In smaller boats you need the bench seat along the transom to create crew cabin headroom but at this size (68 feet) you don't.
Last point: does anyone know the price?
Ok, well then alas it is isn't great value. £2m for 68 feet is pretty punchy. Maybe stabilisers were included at that priceMed spec'd, list price is £2m ex-VAT, but not sure if that included the hardtop.
Ok, well then alas it is isn't great value. £2m for 68 feet is pretty punchy. Maybe stabilisers were included at that price
Any mention of the 30pct ?I don't know what was included specifically, I just asked how much and they said that a nicely spec'd med boat would be that price. I would guess the hardtop probably was included, as every Princess from the 60 upwards had one fitted, so they must assume that most buyers would spec one. The salesman also knows I have a gyro fitted to the current boat, so maybe he did include stabilisers in the guide price.
Any mention of the 30pct ?
I nearly forgot. One general comment from my ever perceptive SWMBO and this applies to nearly every boat not just the P68. Why do boatbuilders always design their cockpit seating facing inwards towards the boat rather than facing outwards towards the sea? Surely it is more pleasant to sit in the cockpit looking out to the scenery rather than watching the aforementioned crew doing the washing up in the aft located galley?
Ok, well then alas it is isn't great value. £2m for 68 feet is pretty punchy. Maybe stabilisers were included at that price