A new
Contest is always good news, a sign that the biggest Dutch shipyard is well and
that the Dutch continue making great quality cruising boats. The first yachts,
several centuries ago, were Dutch, (as well as the origin of the word Yacht)
and the Dutch always had a big tradition in what regards builders and yacht
designers.
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49CS |
But in the
last decades many Dutch brands disappeared and even the Contest, once designed
by a Dutch designer, are now designed by Judel & Vrolijk, a German cabinet
(even if Rolf Vrolijk was born in Nederland).
This design
comes in the same line as the 42CS, a good sailing boat with a very high-quality cruising interior, but I don't like this design as much as the one of the
42CS, even if I understand what makes Contest propose a design with these
characteristics: a very beamy boat, with
a huge freeboard, huge interior volume and very high interior standing height.
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50CS |
In fact, it
is ridiculous talking about standing height because those heights have nothing to do with standing, and are more
typical of a house than a boat, even if I miss the point of having a Yacht
interior that looks like an apartment interior, especially in what regards huge
standing heights.
The reason
why they seem to have opted for a lower B/D than the one in the other Contest is less
understandable. They tried to hide that with a published stability curve that, unlike all the others for the other yachts, has an
interval between 90º and 135º (instead of 100º to 150º) to try to make it less
evident that the AVS is lower than on the other Contest, that generally have it around 125º.
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50CS |
The 49/50CS AVS seems to be a bit less than 120º. A smaller AVS seems to be today a tendency in
sailboat yachts over 45ft, much due to RCD that allows smaller AVS on a bigger
yacht. High-quality brands resisted that, but they are now doing the same to
lower costs. The Halberg Rassy 50 has an AVS of about 115º and the Amel 50 does not disclose it, but it
should be much less than that.
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49CS |
Contest
announced the 49CS as a new yacht, but it is basically the 50CS with a
different interior layout and a slightly different cockpit arrangement. The
50CS offers a huge aft cabin, typical in center cockpits (even if this boat is
a hybrid), while the 49CS offers two smaller aft cabins and a dinghy garage.There is also a small aesthetical difference on the transom inclination, that results in the 50ft being slightly longer, but having the same deck length and LWL as the 49. The extra cms don't result in any significant useful interior space gain.
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Above, the 50CS, below, the 49CS |
I find the 49CS
layout flawed by the lack of storage under the cockpit and by the lack of space
for technical equipment (generator, water-maker, and so on). There is a big space for a dinghy garage but that space is necessarily a semi-wet compartment,
not suitable for this type of equipment, and besides, if you have a dinghy there
you will have space for little else.
This can be solved by having a single aft cabin on the 49CS, that can be bigger than any of the two, and by reserving the rest of the space, now occupied by the other cabin, for technical equipment.
On the
cockpit, both boats have a similar solution with a deep protected central cockpit, separated from the helming station by two steps. This gives an
unusually high helming position, offering little protection, and worst, very
low uncomfortable side seats for helming the boat. The seats behind the wheels
on the 50CS are also low and uncomfortable.
I don’t see
any need of helming central seats on a boat that will be used almost all the
time in auto-pilot, but I don’t like the low uncomfortable lateral seats, that
are more useful than the central ones, and, without those, it is created a very
nice aft deck space, very well suited for deck chairs and relaxation near the swimming platform.
The yacht
is built with the traditional Contest high quality, with a sandwich hull with monolithic, where it offers an advantage. They use vinylester resins on all
laminates and an infusion vacuum process. The structural bulkheads are in sandwich
composite, stratified to the hull and deck, and they use carbon fibers to
reinforce the boat structure.
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From the top: 50CS, 49CS, Swan 48, Swan 50 Club Racer, TP 52 |
Contest is
one of the few traditional high-quality brands that have fully accompanied
technical building yacht evolution, and the yachts are built with the best
techniques available. If we compare with Hallberg-Rassy we will see that while
HR still uses hand laminate while Contest uses vacuum infusion (and they
started using it more than 20 years ago!).
Contest uses vinylster for all
lamination, HR only on the outer layers, Contest uses sandwich structural
bulkheads, HR does not say, and probably they are made of high-quality plywood,
Contest uses Carbon for structural reinforcement, HR doesn't.
The only thing
I prefer about the HR building is the PVC core. Contest does not say, on this, and other yachts, what is used as a core, but I suppose it is balsa, as it was
before. Balsa has very good mechanical properties but it is prone to rot, if
there is a water intrusion on the core, and in the last years almost all quality
builders changed balsa for high-quality polyester foam.
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Above 50CS, below 49CS |
But it is also true that many boats still use
balsa as core without problems, and that Contest has a very advanced building
system: unlike in most yachts, the infusion system is a single shot one, including
the outer layer, the core, and the inside layer. That allows for a more integral and better
waterproof sandwich, not to mention the use of vinylester (a water-proof resin) everywhere.
Regarding
interior quality, it is as good, or better, as the one on HR, but with a different style.
Let’s look at what many here want to know, how
about sailing performance?
Well, this
is one of those very beamy boats with high freeboards and, from what I saw in the Hanse
460 comments, some think that does not have a negative impact on the sail performance,
but it has.
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Above HR 50, Below Amel 50 |
Just look at the shape (beam/length) of a Transpac 52, which was initially drawn for sailing mostly downwind (and that was considered beamy) and that proved to be a very fast racer, in almost all conditions. Look at the beam/length of a Swam 50, which has
proven to be very fast (in real-time) while racing, and compare it with the B/L of the swan 48, which is a compromise between interior space and performance.
The Contest 49CS, the Halberg Rassy 50, and the Amel 50, are also a compromise between interior space and performance, but a much BIGGER compromise.
The Contest
49/50CS is not the only fat boat among these types of high-quality cruisers. Unfortunately, it
seems to be a strong tendency. Amel and Halberg Rassy went for the same type
of very beamy hulls with a high, or very high freeboard, to have the biggest possible interior. I am not saying that those sailboats sail badly, they are all designed by very
competent NAs, but they have their sailing potential limited by the hull choice,
especially in regards to light wind sailing and upwind sailing.
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Halberg Rassy 44 |
These three
yachts have similar hull lengths, being the longest the Amel (15.51m), and the
smallest the C49CS (15.20). The HR and the Contest have not very different beams ( 4.90 - 5.00m), while the Amel 50, is narrower, 4.79m.
They have
similar displacements, 21500kg for the Contest, 21000 for the HR, 20555 for
the Amel, and they have similar SA/D, respectively 17.5, 17.6 and 17.1, offering the HR
a sail maximized version with a substantial bigger 20 SA/D.
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Amel 50 |
Apparently, Amel, due to a smaller beam, should sail better upwind and in light wind (considering the HR with similar SA/D), but it is handicapped by the smallest B/D of them all (by far)
26%, and that with the shortest keel and the less beamy hull.
The HR with a 35% B/D (or the Contest) will be able to get much
more power from heeling and will be more stiff, due to a bigger hull form stability.
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Swan 48 |
With medium to stronger winds, the HR and the Contest, will sail better
upwind than the Amel, and also better downwind with strong winds, while with light winds the Amel should be faster, but not
faster than the HR version with a bigger SA/D. The Contest has also the
stiffness that allows it to carry more sail area, but a version with maximized
sail area is not announced.
On the
Contest, sadly, they don’t give the ballast, but we can see on the published stability curve, that the AVS is a bit less than 120º, while the HR one is about
115º. Having both yachts similar keels, with similar drafts, the Contest
B/D should not be less than the one on the HR.
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Contest 49/50CS |
If the HR
with a 35% B/D has a 115º AVS we can only guess what would be the AVS on the
Amel 50, which has much less draft and a much lower 26% B/D. Probably it would not be as
low as we can imagine, because the very high freeboard and the high superstructure
will contribute to increasing the AVS, but will not increase the RM at 80/90º,
which will be much lower than on the HR or Contest. And the RM at big heel angles
is as important or more than the AVS, in what regards to safety stability.
Surprisingly,
the Contest 49CS at 1.053 million €, seems to cost a bit less than the HR 50
(1.160 million €) and understandably more than the Amel 50 (0.9 million €),
all boats at the shipyard without taxes.
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Contest 49/50CS |
Of course,
boat prices, equipped and with taxes, will be much higher and it is impossible
to know the real price, and who will be more or less expensive, without
having them equipped the same way because the standard equipment and prices of
extras are different.
If you like
sailing fast and want a quality luxury cruiser from a prestigious brand, for about the same price, have a
Swan 48 instead, I mean, if your wife can live in a yacht with a beautiful
high-quality boat-like interior.
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Swan 48 |
https://interestingsailboats.blogspot.com/2019/10/swan-48-perfect-performance-cruiser.html
https://interestingsailboats.blogspot.com/2020/01/swan-48-dusseldorf-2020.html
If she requires a house-like interior, with
the biggest possible interior volume and a huge standing height, then you will
have to sacrifice sailing potential, and have one of these. I would then choose
between the Contest and the Halberg Rassy.
https://interestingsailboats.blogspot.com/2021/03/hallberg-rassy-50-most-beautifull-hr.html
Nice boats, i like the big aft cabin,i also enjoy the pilot house concept on the Anel, so to me, the contest with the pilot house it was perfect, even with out side double steering weeks it was ok,(im always using the auto pilot).
ReplyDeleteI have a big problem in any of those boats, no money to buy any of them😞😂
I think the Contest 50CS will be very close to the new Oyster 495. The helm station is above the aft cabin. This will make many steps in the cabin from front to aft, but a relatively big cockpit.
ReplyDeleteThe HR50 has chosen the opposite. A flat cabin floor from front to aft, without any steps inside. But need a small roof that extends front of the mast, and a BIG aft roof that reduces significantly the cockpit.
It's a matter of taste that's not for me, given the prices. At least 100 000€ the meter of boat, including EU taxes and ready to sail ...
About the Oyster 495 it is hard to say, they make a look of claims about it, but they don't publish the data do substantiate them: they don't say how the boat is built, what are the materials and techniques used, don't say what is the ballast and don't publish the stability curve.
DeleteI asked them information to make a post, but till know I had no reply.