prv
Well-Known Member
The thing I'm always looking for whenever I read any boat review is an answer to the question "Why does this boat stand out from the crowd?" Is it sailing performance, space, details, handling, clever design, price.... or what? If the reader of the review cannot answer that question after reading it, then frankly what was the point?
Of course the majority of boats don't stand out from the crowd, that's why there's a crowd for a few of them to stand out of
Reviewing the boats which are much like all the others is useful for the tiny minority of readers who are considering buying a new boat. For the rest of us, the vast majority, it's not usually very interesting. When I used to get the mags (I subscribed to PBO for a decade and YM alongside it for a while) the new boat review tended to be one of the last things I read, unless the picture showed it to be something out of the ordinary like a French aluminium world-girdler, or a carbon-fibre gaff-rigged weekender, or a quirky Dutch 24-footer with a deckhouse and a computer-controlled centreboard at the bow. Those were all actual reviews that I remember now years later. The latest Bavaria 34? Nope.
I'm not knocking the Bavarias and Beneteaux themselves, they're good boats and the right choice for most people. But they're not entertainment material for a magazine. Think old Top Gear worthily discussing the brake master cylinder on a Rover Metro, versus new Top Gear driving a Lamborghini off a cliff.
Pete