Motorboat & Yachting

NEVER GIVE UP

-

the day, the lack of an enclosed heated deck saloon and the daily battle with zips and poppers cut short his enjoyment of it. What it really needed, he figured, was a set of glass doors that could enclose the forward part of the cockpit on colder days but fold away on warmer ones to maintain the feeling of an open sportscrui­ser. In other words, a set of doors that would give it the same flexibilit­y as the new Princess V48 but without the hassle or expense of trading up to a model that in every other respect he didn’t like as much.

It was a simple enough idea but finding a way to do it was a far harder propositio­n. There was never a factory fit option for doors on this boat so he’d have to design and engineer everything from scratch. The obvious location for the new doors was at the aft end of the dinette where the seat backs provided a natural divide from the stern sunpad. The only trouble was that the hardtop didn’t reach that far back so it would have to be extended and new side windows added to fill the gap.

Then there was the problem of finding a suitable set of doors and windows. Tommy’s original idea was to have a swing door on the port side butting up against a top-hinged window over the dinette that would fold up to the underside of the hardtop. He’d seen this solution on a Jeanneau at a boat show and photograph­ed and measured it to see if it could work on his V48. However, after giving all the measuremen­ts to Opacmare, a key supplier to Princess, it soon became clear that this would be tricky. Not only would it mean extending the hardtop far enough for the window to fold up underneath it, putting extra strain on it, but the window itself would be so large (over 2m wide) that even with two gas struts helping, it would be excessivel­y heavy to lift. Opacmare advised against it and Tommy reluctantl­y agreed.

Determined not to be beaten, he went back to the drawing board to find an alternativ­e solution. He’d seen plenty of bi-fold windows and doors on houses and wondered if this idea could be adapted for his boat. He contacted four different manufactur­ers from all over the world with the measuremen­ts and specificat­ions needed but only found one which he felt would deliver the necessary quality and engineerin­g to cope with the harsh marine environmen­t. Called Solarlux, they were based in Germany but had a Swedish agent and were happy to manufactur­e a door and matching set of toughened glass bi-fold windows to his exact requiremen­ts in marine-grade aluminium. The sliding window mechanism would be sturdy enough for the job but it needed to be supported by a stainless steel frame that would retain its shape even when the boat was flexing (all GRP boats flex a bit in heavy seas).

Tommy contacted a metal fabricator, mocked up a frame in wood to check the fit (boats are rarely perfectly symmetrica­l so the height of the gap differed slightly at each end), then mocked it up again in plain steel to find the vertical

There was never a factory fit option for doors on this boat so he’d have to design everything from scratch

so that the door wouldn’t swing open when afloat. Then and only then did he commit to getting it made up in stainless steel with rubber mountings to allow for a small degree of flex. At the same time a local GRP specialist set to work extending the hardtop by 145cm as per the drawings and computer renderings, which Tommy had spent hours refining and checking with the aid of plywood and paper mock-ups to ensure it looked like part of the original design rather than a hasty aftermarke­t add-on. He even managed to source the perfect door handle, which he found at a housing exhibition in Stockholm.

The final step in the process was designing and commission­ing the side windows needed to fill the triangular gap between the extended hard top, the original side pillars and the new door frame. Once again he and his wife went through countless iterations before deciding on the perfect shape, complete with printed edges to hide the seals and chrome Princess crown logos with the words ‘final edition’ emblazoned beneath them on the two glossy black uprights. As Tommy likes to say, “it costs the same whether you design it well or badly, so you might as well try and get it right.”

The end result is so neatly done and so well integrated that at first glance you’d think it was an original factory-fit option. Tommy reckons the extensive refit cost him around €40,000 in total, almost half of which was spent on the

GRP work to extend the hardtop. The bi-fold windows and doors only accounted for around

€3,500, with the steel work, side windows, a new diesel heating system, roof-mounted grab rails, bow thruster, state of the art plotter and a helm retrimmed in Alcantara with a matching storage box on the navigator’s side accounting for the rest.

“I am thrilled with the result,’ Tommy assures us. “We get twice as much use out of the boat as we used to, especially in the autumn. Last season we spent 27 nights on board because my wife is so much happier and more comfortabl­e on the boat now we can open and close it so easily. It works like clockwork – the door clunks shut like a Mercedes and windows slide and fold effortless­ly. And no more fiddly covers to contend with at the start and end of the day!”

TWICE THE FUN

He reckons the conversion has added around 200kg to the weight of the boat but it’s not enough to make a noticeable difference to its performanc­e or handling. It will still do almost 40 knots flat out and cruises all day at 28-30 knots. Just as importantl­y it attracts constant interest from other Princess V48 owners and even brokers. In fact one broker reckons that the conversion has added more to the value of the boat than it cost him to do – a rarity for any refit.

Not that Tommy is entirely satisfied. “”I still have a list of around 25 small jobs I’d like to do,” he confesses. “I am constantly looking for new ways of improving things. Even over winter I have the boat stored in a heated shed so that I can tinker with it whenever I need to get out of the house. My friends and I refer to it as our day care centre!”

Given this constant search for perfection, would he ever consider starting all over again with another bigger boat?

“I’ve always liked the look of the Princess

V62,” admits Tommy. “But I haven’t yet worked out how I’d improve it.”

Something tells us he’ll soon find a way.

It works like clockwork – the door clunks shut like a Mercedes and the windows slide and fold effortless­ly

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A B O V E : Tommy helps his grandson take charge of the world’s one and only 2009 Princess V48 GT coupé
A B O V E : Tommy helps his grandson take charge of the world’s one and only 2009 Princess V48 GT coupé

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom