Great Design Trawler Truths Design Discussions Economy Our Naval Architect
Truth 1 Truth 2 Truth 3 Truth 4 Truth 5 Truth 6 Truth 7
Truth 1 Truth 2 Truth 3 Truth 4 Truth 5 Truth 6 Truth 7
TRUTH NO. 5: FULL SIZE KITCHEN APPLIANCES, NOT RINKY DINK "MARINE OR SAILBOAT" GEAR, BELONG ON LIVEABOARD TRAWLERS
Competitors outfit their boats with appliances originally designed for the cramped quarters and barebones electrical systems on sailboats. These half-sized stoves and refrigerators are pricey but don't cook or cool any better than what you are used to at home. Even our smallest Great Harbour 37s feature a standard 14-cubic-foot GE refrigerator and a galley with a radiant glass-top stove and convection-microwave -- the kind of gear that you would expect on a 60-foot motoryacht or in a gourmet kitchen at home.
Today, you can easily find a boat that costs $750,000 equipped with a tiny refrigerator and a tiny oven. Maybe it's a 12-volt refrigerator. Call us simpleminded, but household appliances nowadays are so reliable, so efficient and so handsome, why would we want to drive up the price of the boat with "marine" gear that costs more but doesn't work as well or last as long. Fact is, our competitors have to use this stuff because their boats can't fit a full-size refrigerator/freezer, even some of those in the 50-foot range.
Great Harbour Trawlers, endowed as they are with broad beam, have ample room not only for an oversized fridge but other home comforts. The Great Harbours feature a standard-size stacked washer/dryer behind a cabinet in the accommodations. The N37's cavernous bosun's locker will accommodate a combo-unit washer/dryer, and her engine room will fit the same off-the-shelf washer and dryer you have in your basement. There are also places on our boats to out an off-the-shelf, top-loading freezer. In the galley, we like to install convection microwave ovens because they can be powered, without having to start the generator, by our standard 2500-watt inverter. Combine this with an electric cook-top and a wrap-around counter, and you've got the "professional galley" others advertise but don't deliver. |
Also important is long term reliability and the cost of repairs. How often do you hear of "marine" 12-volt refrigerator systems needing parts and service? It seems that there's always one boat in every anchorage or marina that's in need of a hard-to-find marine refrigeration mechanic. With a Great Harbour Trawler, you just need to call the nearest major appliance service center.