Boat test for the 2007 Sea Ray 330 Sundancer including boat specifications, photo galleries, boat videos, boat layout diagrams, boat test numbers, boat test results, and boat speed graphs. Also includes pricing, engine test reviews, ratings, standard features, and gear for the 2007 Sea Ray 330 Sundancer.

 
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HOME  >  BOAT TESTS  >  SEA RAY  >  2007 SEA RAY 330 SUNDANCER
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 BOAT TEST: 2007 Sea Ray 330 Sundancer
BOAT SPECIFICATIONS
Boat Type: Cruiser
Base Price: $244,299
Standard Power: 2/300-hp MerCruiser 350 MPI Bravo III stern drives
Optional Power: 2/ MerCruiser gasoline stern drives to 375 hp each; 2/301-hp Yanmar 6LPA-STZP diesel stern drives; 2/ MerCruiser gasoline V-drive inboards from 300 to 320 hp each
Length Overall (LOA): 35'6"
Beam: 11'6"
Draft: 2'5" (inboards only)
Weight: 15,400 lbs.
Fuel Capacity: 225 gal.
Water Capacity: 40 gal.
Standard Equipment: s/s through-hull fittings; Sunbrella aft, front, and side curtains and aft sun shade; Quick rope/chain windlass; carpet liner; cockpit wet bar; CO detector; Clarion AM/FM stereo/CD player w/ 6-CD changer and 8 speakers; cherry cabinetry; 26" L&G LCD TV w/ game ports in saloon; L&G microwave-coffee maker; dual-volt 4.0 cu.-ft. refrigerator; trash bin; two-burner cooktop; electrically tilting V-berth; VacuFlush MSD; SmartCraft 4-in-1 multigauges; tilt wheel; Northstar NS100SS VHF; 12,000-Btu reverse-cycle A/C; cockpit shower; Bennett trim tabs
Test Engines: 2/385-php MerCruiser 8.1 Horizon gasoline V-drives
Transmissions / Ratio: Twin Disc MG503/2.03:1 (S) 1.98:1 (P)
Props: 18x22 (S) nibral and 18x211⁄2 (P)
Steering: SeaStar hydraulic
Controls: SmartCraft electronic
Optional Equipment On Test Boat: 5-kW Kohler genset; Raymarine C80 radar/chartplotter/GPS; anchor washdown system; DSS satellite TV; Digital Throttle & Shift; s/s cockpit barbecue; cockpit icemaker; 5" remote-controlled spotlight; 17" West Coast Custom flip-down V-berth TV; 15" L&G LCD midcabin TV; 15" L&G LCD cockpit TV w/ DVD player; bow thruster; central vacuum; fold-up foredeck sunpad; additional stereo remote control on transom
Price As Tested: $309,541

By Richard Thiel

The Sea Ray 330 Sundancer replaces the Sea Ray 320 Sundancer, a six-year veteran to which it bears striking similarities in both design and appearance. Both boats can be ordered with stern drives or V-drives, in either case yielding a roomy interior comprised of forward and midcabin staterooms (the latter under the raised helm); each can be separated from the saloon by curtains. The midship dinette seat slides out to convert to a third berth so that theoretically, if not practically, six adults can sleep aboard. The galleys are both simple and efficient, and both Sundancers go like scalded cats, the subject of this test topping out at 40 mph with standard gasoline power. On both boats the comfort level is high, the fitments are nice, and the handling is predictable. So what's the difference?

a d v e r t i s e m e n t

It's the details, which in the 330 seem to have been inspired by a sharpened sense of how these boats are used—mostly on day or possibly weekend trips with friends and family, especially family and especially kids. So not surprising, this is the most youth-oriented Sundancer I've been aboard. For starters, you can order her with four TVs. That's one TV for about every eight feet, a ratio that if translated to, say, the flagship 60-foot Sundancer, would yield enough video output to rival your local Circuit City.

Two things about this televisional multiplication are worth noting. One, there's a flip-down, spin-around, 17-inch West Coast Custom unit with integral CD player over the V-berth that when lowered blocks an otherwise perfect view of the 26-inch hi-def L&G that resides on the aft bulkhead. Doesn't that make one of them superfluous? Not if you can imagine yourself drawing the curtain so you don't have to watch Barney for the 12th time, and not if you consider that the L&G has outputs for video gaming. Of course, so does the 15-inch L&G in the midcabin, which makes this space the perfect choice for kids when Mom and Dad want to reserve the larger, better picture on the 26-incher for themselves. And then, since this is a Sundancer, who wants to be stuck below watching video on a nice day anyway? That explains the 15-inch L&G over the cockpit wet bar.

As every parent knows, kids not only require nearly constant visual stimulation, but also hate to be confined—ya' gotta give ‘em space to roam when you're at anchor. On the 330 they can do that safely and in spades, thanks to a walk-through windshield that's easy to access because the sliding saloon door has big, safe steps molded into it. Up there they can chill on the nifty flip-up chaise lounge/sunpad. Or maybe they'll prefer the flip-down transom seat (first seen on the 310 Sundancer), since back there there's not only water and a wide swim platform but also tunes in the form of speakers (two of eight) and a remote control for the stereo at their feet. (Sea Ray is working on speakers for the foredeck sunpad.)

Yes, kids of all ages will love the 330, but let's remember, this is a powerboat—a rather powerful one at that—and as such, attention must be paid to practical matters as well. One of those is helmsman ergonomics. A double helm seat and the raised helm combine to provide excellent sightlines all around, and the redesigned helm panel puts everything of importance right at your fingertips. I especially like the way Sea Ray clusters electrical switches into attractive subpanels, a more aesthetically pleasing and utile alternative to the conventional and definitely not attractive row of rocker switches.

PAGES: Photo Gallery
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BOAT SPEED GRAPH

Big-displacement gasoline engines may be thirsty (nearly 79 gph at WOT), but they sure do provide great acceleration. Our 330 was on plane in just 11 seconds from a dead stop.

GEAR ONBOARD

MerCRuiser 8.1 Horizon: In a time when the price of oil changes more often than a politician's campaign promises, the gasoline engine sometimes doesn't get much attention. But for people who don't log a lot of hours annually, its lower purchase price more than compensates for its higher fuel cost. In its Horizon series, MerCruiser seems to have taken the marine gasoline engine about as far as it can go. Reliability and combustion efficiency are ensured by direct-fire ignition—each spark plug has its own coil controlled by the engine-management computer, which also controls the eight fuel injectors. But the average boater is more likely to appreciate the durable serpentine drive belt (identical to those that regularly rack up 100,000 miles on cars), artfully integrated coolant-expansion tank, color-coded (and thus easy to find) oil dipstick and fill, and imposing Darth Vadar-ish engine shroud. But my favorite feature is the integral bleed system that lets you easily evacuate water from the block for winterization. There's even a small air pump mounted on each engine.—R.T.


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