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Fast and smooth in rough water, the Carver
42 Super Sport is a sea savvy vessel in
which to make your weekend escape. What’s
more, docking is something you’d trust the
kids to do, thanks to the fitted Volvo IPS
It was gusting at least 20kts, with a
bitter winter wind scurrying across the
bay and shunting Carver’s high-volume 42
Super Sport into the fuel wharf during the
test of this boat.
Ordinarily, the escape would necessitate
plenty of opposing throttle and pivoting
off a fender. Or driving forward on a long
springer and throwing the rope once you’re
a sufficiently safe distance off the
marina. Skills stuff.
Of course, many boats have bow and,
increasingly, stern thrusters these days.
But in strong broadside winds the average
24V bow and stern thrusters are actually
pretty useless. Especially when the wind
is abeam and the boat is a high volume
one.
Volvo IPS Joystick to the rescue!
Fitted with a pair of 370hp IPS 500 motors
with forward-facing propellers that swivel
in response to the wheel or the latest IPS
Joystick control, the Carver decamped from
the marina as adeptly as a crab scuttling
sideways in a crevice.
In fact, such was the ease with which the
boat was shunted off the berth that its
local agent, James Mark Anthony from
Pathfinder Marine, was moved to make two
predictions. First, that women will be
doing the docking while the blokes tend
the lines. And second, given their
predisposition for computer games with
joysticks, that kids will be right at home
commanding big cruisers. Move over, dads.
The Carver 42 Super Sport with a
Euro-style extended flybridge was an
interesting boat for other reasons, too.
The world’s biggest builder of motoryachts
when defined as aft-cabin cruisers and
suchlike, Carver employs 1200 people to
produce more than 20 models from the 35SS
to the 86ft Marquis, with prices ranging
from $400,000 to $10 million.
Pathfinder Marine in Sydney, now with
outlets in Queensland and Victoria, has
been the local agent for more than 20
years. Back in the 1980s, the Carver range
went from 21 to 42ft. So you can see the
trend to bigger boats and, as with this
commodious 42 Super Sport fitted with
Volvo Penta’s IPS and Joystick, to bigger
and more user-friendly cruisers with all
the mod cons.
Hugely popular in the lake regions of
America, Carver is actually the most
profitable of all the Genmar boat brands
today, I’m told. Which is interesting when
you consider the different thinking that
has gone into these boats and, shall I
say, the challenging design lines.
However, once aboard the 42 Super Sport
the intentions are clear: two cabins and
two heads make for a savvy boat in which
to escape with another cruising couple.
Thus, this could be seen as a kid-free
boat for cruising in adult company. And
should the (grand) kids want to camp over,
no worries, there’s always the sofa bed in
the saloon.
ON-WATER SLEEPING
Considering Carvers are very much
high-volume cruisers, where better to
start than indoors? I swanned inside the
single-level saloon/galley and headed
forward to the master cabin in the bow,
where I found the mandatory island double
bed, dressed with a lovely black and white
checked spread, which looked doubly smart
surrounded by American cherrywood joinery.
Air-con could be called on for
ventilation, or you could just open the
circular escape hatch for fresh air. But I
couldn’t find a pullout shade screen over
that ceiling hatch, so you might have to
have something cut to fit. However, there
were curtains over the fixed portlights.
A mirror on the bedhead added to the sense
of space, as did abundant storage in side
lockers, under-bed drawers and cupboards
and a cedar-lined hanging locker. If
you’re looking for the television, it
folds flat into a recess in the ceiling
liner and there are also speakers for
piped music.
Carver makes the most of the volume up
front with a split ensuite featuring a
moulded WC compartment with sink and
Vacuflush loo, and yet more storage space,
to starboard, and separate shower stall to
port. There was a curtain, moulded seat
and opening hatch but no extractor fan in
that shower recess. How do you dry it out
when it’s raining or you’re underway?
A sliding door on track separates the
master suit from the companionway, off
which is the VIP guest’s cabin to
starboard. You step down to the carpeted
floor before a queen-sized double berth,
which is flanked by twin opening ports,
with head room at the foot of the bed
before a hanging locker and drawers.
Across the companionway is the guest’s/day
head and a roomy moulded space it is, too.
There is a sliding circular shower screen,
Vacuflush loo, solid vanity surface, nice
spread of bathroom fittings and, yes, an
extractor fan and hatch. By my reckoning
this is the preferred onboard shower for
owners when they’re boating alone.
ON-WATER LIVING
The split high/low windows, which are a
product of the boat’s walkaround decks,
direct lots of light into the single-level
saloon. Immediately inside the big glass
door to the cockpit is a lounge room of
sorts, with a two-person lounge/sofa or
bed to port, two swivel tub chairs and a
20-inch television/DVD/sound system
opposite, and the AC/DC panel with
incremental water and waste-tank gauges
nearby.
Check to see if you can empty the holding
tank with the press of a button, as former
Carvers have a system that necessitates
climbing into the engine room.
Alongside in the open plan saloon are the
portside galley and huge dinette opposite,
which can, by my reckoning, seat six or
eight if you add a couple of loose chairs.
The continuous dinette lounge, upholstered
in soft-touch Ultraleather, and vast
burlwood tabletop improve the lux factor.
The wetbar, in case you need it, is on the
bridge.
I knocked my noggin on the overhead galley
cupboards above the twin sinks – I guess
that’s something you only do once – and
noted, as with the entire boat, an
abundance of storage space. The walk-in
subfloor pantry, with optional
washer/dryer, is something I’ve only ever
seen on much bigger European motorboats.
Nice feature and room for a month’s worth
of victuals and, perhaps, extra
refrigeration if extended live-aboard
boating is your thing. Marked by a
hardwearing Amtico mock-timber floor, the
galley has a small microwave oven (not a
convection model), small upright
fridge/freezer, two-burner ceramic cooktop
and solid counters. But there wasn’t an
opening port or extractor fan, no fiddle
rail on the food-prep spaces, and not a
lot of space to stir a deep pot on the
stove should you actually want to cook
something grand like pasta or boil
lobsters or crabs.
However, the uncluttered living space is a
highlight and it’s especially spacious
when you stop to consider the walkaround
decks, decent amount of cockpit and vast
flybridge on this 42-footer. And another
good thing: engine access is through a
cockpit hatch for tradespeople and a floor
hatch indoors for owner-drivers destined
to perform pre-departure checks.
OPEN PLAN ENGINE ROOM
Under the saloon floor there is one large,
continuous engine and utility space, which
includes such things as fan-forced
venting, battery charger, 9kw generator,
hot-water tank, and battery system with
master breakers, separate house banks and
an engine-start protection system.
The Volvo engines have the through-hull
IPS drives attached to aft ends or tails
of the motors, which include underwater
exhausts and water intakes. Thus, without
the exhaust elbows and sea strainers, and
sans the space that shafts would normally
take up, there is a lot of space to be
gained. However, Carver fails to make use
of this.
Deck hatches, wet boxes, storage for table
and chairs – these are the kinds of things
boatbuilders should include to make full
use of the space gains of IPS.
The only checks needed with these motors
are the oil levels and, since there are no
coolant overflow bottles on the Volvo’s
cooling system, you’ll need to ensure that
there’s no coolant pooling in the bilge.
Or take a look in the header tank. All
very simple and, what’s more, the Volvo’s
have long servicing intervals of 400hrs
between oil changes, I’m told.
DECK LIVING
The cockpit has room to assemble a table
and chairs, to fish or recline on a
sunlounge. The deep boarding platform
doubles as a waterfront seat, too, with
the swim ladder and handheld hot/cold
shower nearby. Sidepocket storage is
shallow and the boat needs fender baskets
on its bowrail – or subfloor storage,
which would be easy thanks to the IPS.
Five steps range up the hull sides to the
walkaround decks, which make this an
all-round accessible, crew and
kid-friendly boat that’s also great for
cruising or catching views. Think
fireworks or watching big regattas. And
with that joystick control it may be you
who is moving around the decks and tying
or untying the fenders.
But in respect of outdoor areas, the
extended flybridge is the place to do your
sundowners. It’s very welcoming, thanks to
the moulded stairwell and, along with a
wetbar with fridge, sink, drinkholders and
storage space, there’s oodles of seating –
an aft double sunpad, L-shaped lounge for
four around a dinette, two-person
aft-facing lounge, two-person co-pilot
seat and two-person helm seat with
bolster. All up, that’s seating for 10 or
whatever maritime authorities allow.
The helm to port has great views forward
and you can see the portside edge of the
transom when berthing. Besides the
fingertip-controlled EVC electronic
shifts, the engine-monitoring panels and
the Volvo Penta Joystick, there were
Lectrotab trim tabs, a spotlight, tilt
wheel, scope to fit electronics, and a
switch panel with windlass control.
THE JOY OF BOATING
The underwater exhausts ensure you smell
hardly a whiff of diesel from the Volvo
IPS 500s, even at start-up. The D6 engines
have the 500 code because, in its
marketing wisdom, Volvo reckons you’ll get
the equivalent performance of twin
conventional 500hp shaft-driven motors.
Having driven this boat, it does seem that
way. Meanwhile, the joystick alters the
direction of thrust from the IPS, which
has forward-facing propellers, like an
aeroplane, for low-speed manoeuvring.
Curious, I jumped on the joystick, pushing
it forward and noting that the motors
maintained a maximum of about 1100rpm.
Push the joystick aft and we went astern.
But press the boost button and you get an
extra 600rpm on the base revs and plenty
of grunt to shift a big boat like this
back into the wind. Engage the Volvo EDC
controls by knocking them into gear and
the joystick beeps, letting you know it’s
disengaged. Now steering is back on the
wheel. Easy.
The important point to remember is that
not all boats have the same drift rate and
therefore, when you shunt the joystick
across hoping for the boat to slew
sideways, it may want to lead with its bow
or stern. So it was on the Carver 42 SS
and, as I learned, Volvo Penta has to
adjust the joystick for each and very
boat. As it was, fitted post haste at the
Sydney International Boat Show, you needed
more power to push the bow into the wind.
Parked on that fuel wharf, buffeted by
that southerly, it was clear that Volvo
Penta’s IPS with joystick is superior to
bow and stern thrusters.
Underway, the motors offer amazing grunt
and seriously snappy acceleration. The
lightly laden boat was powered by
sterndrives. Two speeds were noted:
34.6kts at 3520rpm and 22.8kts at 3000rpm.
So the cruise speed will be about 26kts at
3200rpm – fast by any measure. Fast and
smooth in the rough water, quiet and
smoke-free, and with speeds befitting
bigger motors. But when I pulled the wheel
around at high speeds, the boat didn’t
turn any sharper than if it had
shaftdrives. I think Volvo must detune the
handling at top revs as a safety feature.
The same thing has happened before.
It will be interesting to see if the
handling is sportier when fitted to
sportscruisers, if there is different
software for those boats. However, it was
a great match for this flybridge cruiser,
which is bound to spend days and nights at
anchorages mollycoddling its owners.
HIGHS
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Two heads and two double beds is a
winning combination
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Abundant storage space, head and
shoulder room in the indoor living areas
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User-friendly walkaround and a decent
cockpit
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Extended flybridge creates a big outdoor
living area
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Acceleration and top speed are fantastic
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Great low-speed off-the-wheel steering
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Volvo IPS and joystick really do work
and offer intuitive parking
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The same dealer has imported Carver for
more than 20 years.
LOWS
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Carvers aren’t known for their comely
lines
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No extractor fan in master shower
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No extractor fan or opening port in
galley
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Mind your head on the overhead galley
cupboards
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Small microwave oven without a
convection function
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Better use could be made of the
sub-floor space gains courtesy of the
IPS
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Deck cleats are small
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It will be a challenge finding a pretty
canvass-and-clears package to protect
the flybridge
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Boat doesn’t turn sharply when the
throttles are right down and the wheel
is hard over
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CARVER 42 SUPER SPORT |
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HOW MUCH? |
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Price as tested: $799,000 w/ twin
Volvo IPS 500 315hp and options |
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Options fitted: Engine upgrade and
Australian specification which
includes holding tank system,
wetbar on bridge, upgraded AV
including televisions, sofa bed,
full decor package and more. |
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Priced from: $695,000 w/ twin
freshwater-cooled 8.1lt Crusader
330hp petrol motors. |
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GENERAL |
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Material: GRP hull and composite
sides and deck |
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Type: Moderate-vee planing |
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Length overall w/ platform: 13.28m |
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Beam: 4.24m |
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Draft: Approx 1.17m |
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Weight: Approx 15,264kg laden |
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CAPACITIES |
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Berths: 4+2 |
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Fuel capacity: 1818lt |
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Water capacity: 409lt |
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Holding tanks: 95lt |
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ENGINE |
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Make/model: Volvo IPS 500 |
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Type: Inline six-cylinder turbo
diesel engine |
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Rated HP: 370 at 3500rpm |
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Displacement: 5.5lt |
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Weight: 900kg incl. IPS drive |
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Gearboxes (Make/ratio): IPS |
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Props: Special forward-facing
Duoprop T2-T10 |
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* Prices & data correct at time of
publication |
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