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| North American Formula
STORY AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY MIKE HUNTER |
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Big, well-styled launches with luxury interiors are generally popular with the local and export markets.The company's most recent launching from the Kumeu yard was La Promessa, meaning The Promise. The 50-footer is the first Formula to be drawn by the Senior Marine Design Group, headed by Grant Senior, who is also Formula Boats' managing director. The newly designed hull shape has a fine entry with a medium to deep vee for'ard. The hull, described by the designer as distorted, runs back to a deadrise of 10 degrees at the transom. 'The chines are the secret to that boat,' confides Senior. 'Under the water the planing strakes are different from the conventional type of boat. They are large and there are only two a side. The chines are extremely wide to keep the boat dry and up on top.'
La Promessa was not to stay long in New Zealand, having been built for a North American cardiologist owner. Her sea trial was the delivery from Auckland to Tauranga, from where she would be shipped to Portland, Oregon in time for Christmas, and an appearance at the Seattle Boat Show later in January. Shipping schedules had driven the construction time with the boatbuilding team working through the night to have her ready for marine surveyor Robin Williams, before her delivery to Tauranga. Her new home was to be 120nm up the Colombia River from the Pacific Ocean. Her boat show commitments would see her sailed back down the river and up the coast to Seattle, a further 255nm. Senior, who has boated in the area, will skipper La Promessa for the journey which will take two to three days because of logs in the water at this time of the year, mid-winter. He says he will appreciate La Promessa airconditioned heating, and the protection of the hardtop. Although the boat will be marketed as the Formula Icon 50 in New Zealand, La Promessa will be marketed as the first Royal Pacific 50 to reach North American waters. The boating there involves long distances between anchorages, usually in sheltered water, so boats are finished to a luxurious standard, but easily handled by two people. Engines An air strut assisted hatch in the cockpit sole lifts to reveal a crawlthrough channel, which gives good access to either engine under the saloon floor. The engines' small size means they fit easily under the saloon, with enough room for maintenance and checking. At the after end under the cockpit sole is th e 15kva Westerbeke genset to provide on board 112V power, for the galley and entertainment equipment. Most electronics, entertainment and navigation equipment are to be fitted in oregon. Aft of the engines are the aluminium fuel and water tanks gave La Promessa a cruising range of 620nm.
Accommodation Sea trial
We reached Tauranga at a cruise speed of 22kts at 2,200rpm average for the trip. Top speed was 27kts, with the boat fully laden with fuel. Her sea kindliness was evident throughout the journey. Using her fine entry and rounded underbody, the prominent flared chines peeled the water apart in a flat smooth motion, which the designer and the crew enjoyed. Alongside at the Tauranga Bridge Marina, the Formula team got to work on a couple of teething problems which had cropped up through the trip and by midday the next day La Promessa was safely on her way across to the other side of the Pacific. Suppliers to La Promessa include: Formula Cruisers Ltd: boatbuilding; |
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Home | About Us | Products | Services | Distributors | FAQ | Order | Links | Articles | New | Sponsorship | Site Map | Specification