To supplement these day spaces, there’s an island sunbed at the bow, plus an additional sunbed on the rooftop, accessed by means of a ladder on the port side of the foredeck. And if you head down the internal steps to the lower deck, the surprises continue.
The lounge, for instance, sits at an intermediate level, between the lower deck acco*modation and the main deck saloon. That enables it to enjoy a fully open, double-height space, flooded with natural light from the screen up top. There’s a starboard galley and a port dinette in here and the relative elevation of this zone improves the privacy of the cabins too.
Step forward and you’ll find an ensuite owner’s cabin with plenty of windows, hatches and skylights. Further aft, that big 20ft beam is divided equally between a pair of ensuite guest cabins. You can also split the forward cabin into a pair of symmetrical ensuite doubles and spec this as a four-cabin boat but for the most part, that’s likely to be the preserve of the charter market, where sleeping capacity and equality of cabins is key.
As for performance, this steady Category-A boat is very much about co*fort rather than pace. Constructed using vacuum infusion, it features a carbon-infused superstructure to keep the centre of gravity low and a pair of Yanmar diesels on shaft drives for simple reliability.
That should see it return efficiency figures of around 1.25l/Nm at eight knots, rising to 1.5l/Nm at 10 to 12 knots, for a very handy range of between 640 and 800 miles – and a draft of just 2ft 10in should prove very useful for shallow-water cruising too.
LOA: 60ft 5in (18.41m)
Beam: 19ft 11in (6.06m)
Engines: Twin 150-250hp Yanmar diesels on shafts
Top speed: 14 knots
Starting price: Available upon application
This article Omikron OT60 tour: New passagemaker heading at Boot Düsseldorf 2024 appeared first on Motor Boat & Yachting.
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