In this case, the reduced length has co*pelled Bavaria to factor in a swinging backrest, which means that, when the aft cockpit bench is in operation, the transom dinette will only seat two. But the fact that the feature has survived intact is a major bonus for this smallest of the SR craft.
As you move forward, it’s clear that Bavaria has also tried to maximise cockpit space by keeping the side decks quite narrow. Happily, it has also worked hard to mitigate the impact of that with sturdy toerails, lofty guardrails and a useful (if rather short) rooftop grabrail.
While it still feels a bit tight making your way fore and aft, these features do help ease any trepidation – and once you get there, the big foredeck sunpad provides a handy extra space to relax with a drink.
Back in the cockpit, cocooned within wraparound glass, things again feel pretty good. It adopts the same port dinette, starboard wet bar and raised helm layout as the rest of the fleet.
To maximise versatility, the Bavaria SR33 can be specced with a full-scale fabric sunroof or a smaller fibreglass unit above the helm – and you can also pick either a camping cover that turns the cockpit into a climate-controlled day space or a sun shade for extra shelter above the aft dinette.
Either way, the use of elevated mouldings at the starboard helm and the port co-pilot seat are clearly a means of maximising volume down below – and while I remain unconvinced by the merits of the elevated chaise longue to port of the helm, its benefits for the space down below are impossible to dispute.
Read Alex’s full review of the Bavaria SR33 in the June issue of MBY, which is out now.
LOA: 37ft 5in (11.4m)
Beam: 11ft 4in (3.46m)
Draft: 2ft 10in (0.86m)
Displacement: 8,500kg
Fuel capacity: 500 litres
Engines: Twin 250-350hp inboard petrol or diesel
Test engines: Twin Volvo Penta D4 300 diesels on sterndrives
Top speed on test: 31.4 knots
Fuel consumption: 67lph @ 20 knots / 29lph @ 9 knots
Cruising range: 119nm @ 20 knots / 124nm @ 9 knots
Noise: 87 dB(A) @ 20 knots
RCD category: B8/C10
Price as tested: €340,000 (ex. VAT)
This article Bavaria SR33 sea trial: The best co*pact cruiser Bavaria has ever built? appeared first on Motor Boat & Yachting.
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