If anyone can add excitement to the functional 40ft flybridge market, it's the Italian yard
£391947
If anyone can add excitement to the functional 40ft flybridge market, it's the Italian yard
£391947
Spanish yard Rodman is a builder of serious co*mercial craft from patrol boats to large ferries, so it’s no surprise that its leisure boat-building arm creates some sturdy cruisers.
They might not represent the pinnacle of fashion but they’re always very solid and dependable. Therefore, they deserve a spot on the list of the best family boats with a 40-foot flybridge.
Launched in 2000, the 41 was Rodman’s first attempt at a proper motor cruiser and it came to the party with a co*pletely blank sheet of paper.
Opting to raise the forward end of the main deck saloon area and place the galley there next to the helm was a neat touch, as it co*pletely opened up not just the footprint of the lower deck, but also the headroom, which usually gets a little pinched as it slides beneath the main deck.
The result is a genuinely convincing three-cabin layout and that’s not something you tend to find at this size.
There are staggered bunk beds in the third cabin, reducing the slightly claustrophobic effect of the lower bunk.
Cabin two shares the day heads and is a proper twin-bedded affair. And the forward owner’s cabin co*es with a central island double bed
and its own bathroom.
The Rodman 41 is a no-nonsense sort of design that ages well.
As a conventional flybridge, you get steps rather than a ladder to gain access to the upper deck from the aft cockpit. You also get wide, safe side decks and a very generous bathing platform.
This model was first developed for twin shaft drive installations.
When Volvo Penta launched IPS in 2005, Rodman was one of the first to adopt this new technology but it didn’t simply fit pods into the existing hull.
Instead a new hull mould with aft sections was specifically optimised for IPS and twin IPS500s were used.
This boat is smooth and quiet, particularly on the flybridge where the engines are all but inaudible.
Despite being a solid 12 tonnes, acceleration is lively, cornering is enthusiastic and it’s pretty good in a chop too.
Next on our list of best family boats is the Sessa Fly 40.
The 40ft flybridge sector was very firmly established by the time Italian builder Sessa brought out its first example. So in order to differentiate its new baby from the existing herd, it went big on Italian style.
Inside and out, this is a cool-looking vessel, and yet it’s been achieved without any loss of practicality or usefulness.
Considering that this boat is over a decade old, it’s incredible just how fresh and modern this interior is – a testimony to how far ahead the Italians were with interior finishes when this boat was built.
With chenille upholstery, carpet inlaid into wooden flooring, pale hessian headlining and deep brown mouldings, it looks superb.
Despite its galley-down layout (with optional washing machine), Sessa has still included two cabins and two heads on the lower deck, as well as an enormous storage void under the saloon floor.
Style is equally sophisticated on the outside. In this case, we have a jet-black hull, though metallic silver grey was another attractive option.
We also have saloon windows that sweep dramatically down to deck level, as well as stainless steel fittings everywhere you look.
There are also some neat touches elsewhere, not least in the vinyl-upholstered underside of the flybridge overhang above the cockpit – a feature that we’re only recently starting to see from other brands.
Only the two-piece windscreen and the portholes (rather than hull windows) date it slightly.
The layout is pretty conventional flybridge fare but it works well. And there’s a huge bathing platform for tender retrieval and storage duties.
In an era when most builders were still using shaft drives, Sessa was quick to get on board with Volvo Penta IPS pod drives. On this boat, they’re hooked up to twin IPS400 engines based on the D4-300s.
When we tested it new, that delivered a 28-knot top end and a 22-knot cruise.
The Sessa Fly 400 is remarkably quiet from the upper helm. Steering is electronic and finger-light, manoeuvring is joystick controlled and it feels solid at speed too.
This article Best 40ft family flybridge boats on the market now appeared first on Motor Boat & Yachting.
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