I have friends who are avid Tiara owners and I have been nothing but impressed with the depth of build quality that, in my opinion, is on a par with the likes of Fairline and Princess. Also the Tiara has a large forward double berth and separate full shower and heads. Costing nearly $1million when new, four-year-old versions can now be picked up in the mid $500,000s.
Next up and by far the fastest boat on my list is the Mystic M3800. It co*es with a legendary performance pedigree and features a state-of-the-art hull and carbon-fibre superstructure. Each boat is built to order with a semi-custom paint job and upholstery.
A quick email to Mystic’s owner, John Cosker, revealed that he had two demo boats for sale. The older of the two was within budget and equipped with quad Mercury 300Rs for a top speed of more than 60 knots and a Seakeeper stabiliser. The newer boat was rigged with quad 400R V10 outboards for a top speed of 80 knots, but was marginally over budget.
The Mystic has a fantastic helm with twin 22” Garmins and heavily bolstered seating appropriate to its immense performance. The cabin has a decent double berth and wet room arrangement with pullout shower and open head.
In truth this is a boat that makes a hotel reservation look like the better sleeping option, although with air-conditioning it is perfectly usable for a night or two if really needed.
Before getting carried away with either of the above options, my first stop was to visit my local dealer, Nautical Ventures, who represent Axopar, Fairline and Windy.
I bought an Axopar 22 from them last year to use as a local runaround and have had such an excellent experience working with them that after a quick chat, I added a used Brabus 900 XC Black Ops and Suntop 900 to my list.
Both were in budget and rigged with phenomenal twin Mercury 450R powerplants. Also their Fairline F33 with twin 400 Mercury Verados looked very tempting at nearly 50% off its new price while still being within warranty.
Keen to start the weighing-up process, I booked in a sea trial for the Fairline first. The demo boat has the new wrap-around cockpit layout, essentially a small version of the excellent Targa 45 Open arrangement with its teak cockpit table stowed under the seats on a cantilevered bracket.
Thanks to the twin outboard engines, the sunpad lifts electrically to reveal a huge storage space where the inboard version’s engines are located.
The cabin really is a packaging marvel, with a generous separate head and wet room, a co*fortable double berth aft and a convertible U-shaped dinette forward that drops down to create a second double bed. The interior is also truly beautiful to look at; chic, modern but with a hint of retro. co*bined with Fairline’s quality, I am instantly impressed by it.
With a stiff onshore breeze blowing and rolling 4-footers on the day of our sea trial, we were definitely going to get wet but what better way to get a feel for the boat? Running out of the wide Port Everglades inlet proved exactly that.
The Fairline’s deep-vee hull hits the mark, without so much as a creak from its hull or substantial hardtop. It’s more akin to a GT than an out-and-out superboat but I like that. It will eat the miles and arrive in style, like an Aston Martin. So far it is pretty much bang on in all departments, except for the two small 7in displays. Radar images are barely legible on that size display and accurately reading data beco*es a nuisance.
However, I might be able to replace them with one of Simrad’s new widescreen 16in MFDs, so Nautical Ventures are enquiring whether Fairline’s integrated app, needed to control the boat’s ancillaries, will work on the Simrad unit.
Next stop, a quick look at the Brabus 900 Black Ops. Unexpectedly for a 37-footer, the forward cabin feels too co*promising for my needs, without a proper separate heads co*partment or inside shower. As eye-catching as it is with its stunning black leather quilted interior and carbon-fibre helm, I just know I couldn’t live with this impractical heads arrangement, despite appreciating how good the Axopar hull is.
I already know the Tiara well and have driven Mystic’s larger sister the M4300, so a quick tour with my wife of the three remaining contenders and a final drive of her chosen winner should settle the decision.
For pure performance, the Mystic will win hands down, while the Tiara has the edge on space and amenities but the Fairline, with its mix of Bond-level cool, British build quality and genuine weekender acco*modation, offers a particularly co*pelling alternative to both of them.
I promise to keep you updated about which way it goes as soon as the deal is done!
This article If you've got $500k to spend on a motorboat, what should you get? appeared first on Motor Boat & Yachting.
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