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BOAT TEST: 2006 Baia Azzurra 63
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BOAT SPECIFICATIONS
Boat Type: Cruiser
Base Price: $2,039,200
Standard Power: 2/1,360-hp MAN V12 1360 CRM diesel inboards
Optional Power: 2/1,502-hp MTU 10V 2000 M93 diesel inboards
Length Overall (LOA): 63'0"
Beam: 16'6"
Draft: 2'8"
Weight: 55,000 lbs.
Fuel Capacity: 800 gal.
Water Capacity: 163 gal.
Standard Equipment: cherry sole; electrically retractable canvas roof; 10.4” Navionics 11C color chartplotter, Geonav AP801 autopilot; Furuno HS2721 VHF; 72,000-Btu Condario A/C; White Star compass; Lewmar windlass; Danforth anchor; 20-kW Kohler diesel genset; 12-gal. Isea water heater; Opacmare passerelle; 2/VacuFlush MSDs; Whale hot/cold transom shower; 20” Sharp Aquos LCD TV; Sony CDX-M8800 CD player; Whirlpool full-size ‘fridge/freezer; two-burner Ceran cooktop
Test Engines: 2/1,502-hp MTU 10V 2000 M93 diesel inboards
Transmissions / Ratio: Twin Disc/1.5:1
Props: 5-blade Rolla; size not available
Steering: Arneson hydraulic
Controls: MTU single-lever electronic
Optional Equipment On Test Boat: Side-Power bow thruster; teak swim platform; teak cockpit sole; Vitrifrigo ice maker; fridge/freezer; sink in cockpit; cockpit A/C
Price As Tested: $2,135,636
Conditions: temperature: 71; humidity: 56%; wind: 20 mph; seas: 2’-4’; load: 400 gal. fuel, 110 gal. water, 4 persons, 200 lbs. gear. Speeds are two-way averages measured w/Stalker radar gun. GPH extrapolated from manufacturer-supplied fuel curve. Range: 90% of advertised fuel capacity. Decibels measured on A scale. 65 dB is the level of normal conversation.
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By Jeffrey Moser
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I am a voracious reader, but occasionally I find it tricky to decipher the meaning behind certain works. In his book Mother Night, Kurt Vonnegut made it easy for me: He states the novel’s theme in the preface. “You are what you pretend to be,” Vonnegut writes, adding that we should be darn careful about what we pretend to be, as we may just become that. Recently I was at Allied Richard Bertram’s Fort Lauderdale, Florida, office for a wring-out of baia’s 63-foot Azzurra, and a below-decks inspection had me thinking of Vonnegut’s statement. Had baia turned its back on its racing heritage in favor of luxury and comfort?
Her saloon is huge and luxurious, with 6’8” headroom and a plush, L-shape, red leather settee to starboard. Across from here, her granite-topped galley’s full-size Whirlpool refrigerator/freezer and abundant stowage could easily swallow a week’s worth of cruising provisions for a family of four. Two aft staterooms, each with a set of single berths, complement a forepeak master with walkaround queen. In addition, en suite heads with showers serve all staterooms.
a d v e r t i s e m e n t
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Looking around this well-appointed interior, I began to wonder. Cantieri de Baia made a name for itself over the last 20 years on the European racing circuit for its exclusive use of surface-piercing drives and pre-impregnated Kevlar hulls, not cushy accommodations. Had baia gone soft?
Not by a long shot. My test boat reached an average top speed of 54.4 mph, darn respectable for a 63-footer, especially when you consider we were in the open ocean, bouncing over steady three- and four footers. Attribute her speed partly to a relatively lightweight Kevlar composite hull: At 55,000 pounds, the 63 is approximately 10,000 pounds lighter than a competitor’s similar-sized and-powered express. But some of the credit also goes to her optional 1,502-hp MTU 10V 2000 M93 common-rail diesels and standard Arneson ASD12 surface drives.
Piloting the 63 was markedly different from running shaft-driven counterparts. “It’s a technical boat to run,” commented Allied Richard Bertram’s Capt. William Walker, who joined me on the sea trial. I watched closely as he provided a tutorial.
To get the 63 up on plane, he trimmed the Arnesons all the way up using joysticks grouped on the helm along with sticks for the bow thruster, tiller, and trim tabs. Next he firewalled the MTUs: With half of the big Rolla props (Twin Disc, which owns Rolla, declined to release the prop size) out of the water, there wasn’t much bite, and the 63 crawled forward. Once the MTUs reached about 1200 rpm, Walker slowly dropped the drives. At 1500 rpm the props, now fully submerged, got a good bite, and as Walker yelled, “Here we go!” and as the MTUs went from 1500 to 1750 rpm, our speed doubled to about 39 mph. Walker then raised the drives, reducing drag and bringing the blades half of the water, which produced a roostertail a few boat lengths off our stern: Just like that my Stalker radar gun read 56.4 mph before conditions dictated that Walker throttle back to a cruising speed of 48.5 mph at 2000 rpm.
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