Boat test for the 2004 Hampton 680 Pilothouse with boat pictures, boat specifications, and boat test results. Includes pricing, videos, engine test reviews, and ratings for the 2004 Hampton 680 Pilothouse.

 
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HOME  >  BOAT TESTS  >  HAMPTON  >  2004 HAMPTON 680 PILOTHOUSE
 BOAT TEST: 2004 Hampton 680 Pilothouse
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I could easily see this area was well-suited for outdoor entertaining, as I noted a table and seating for six just aft of the port helm and, aft of that, a sun lounge with a stowage compartment beneath that ran its entire length and was long enough to accomodate an Ocean Kayak. Conveniently located opposite the eating area was a wet bar with a refrigerator, freezer, and barbeque. And then the starboard engine quit.

Baker had already dropped the port engine’s rpm and brought the other throttle back to neutral. Our speed was now a little more than 4 knots. Collectively we scanned the helm for information, taking special note of the blank starboard CatVision screen. Baker’s attempt to restart was unsuccessful, so Roberts went down to the engine room to try it from there. That also proved not to work. He quickly checked the port Racors and, after we switched to the pilothouse helm, signaled Baker to throttle up. The starboard engine spun the PTO for the Wesmar system, and even though our speed was drastically cut and the stabilizers weren’t working, I noted that the boat still handled the existing conditions quite well, with minimum rolling while underway at 9 knots.

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

This all happened just short of Hillsboro Inlet, which left us about 32 miles from our Lake Worth destination. As Hillsboro is noted for being feisty in this kind of wind and an ebbing tide, which it was, and with a shoaling area just south of the entrance, we decided to go for Lake Worth. Besides, this boat had to be in her dock by day’s end for the following day’s opening of the boat show. For the next three hours or so, we were all listening very carefully to that port engine.

By the time we turned into Lake Worth Inlet and passed Peanut Island, we shared a sigh of relief. I have to say I was impressed by the way the boat handled herself in these seas while running on both engines as well as only one.

We approached the show site and, as there were other boats before us, held our position for our turn to dock. Even in the lee of the ICW, the wind, somewhat abated, was still gusting. We were back on the bridge deck and had at least another hour before we would be able to dock. “Our interiors are pretty special too,” Roberts commented, referring to the fact that there was more to this boat than a seaworthy hull.

We took the aft stairway to the cockpit. Upon entering the saloon, I could see what he meant. Besides the outstanding craftsmanship of the cherry interior, there was seven feet of headroom. “We kept that fairly constant throughout, except in the engine room. There’s only 6’2” in there,” he said. Combined with wide windows all around, the saloon felt even larger and more airy.

The forward bulkhead, separating the galley and pilothouse from the saloon, is an eye-catching piece of interior architecture, with a design that includes bookshelves, a cabinet, a 42-inch plasma screen TV hidden behind etched glass art, and a serving window to the galley. “One of our other owners wanted a complete see-through to the galley, so all this, except for the television screen, is going away,” Roberts said.

PAGES: Photo Gallery
BOAT SPECIFICATIONS
Boat Type: Cruiser
Base Price: $1,662,000
Standard Power: 2/800-hp Caterpillar 3406E diesel inboards
Optional Power: 2/1,000-hp Caterpillar C18 diesel inboards
Length Overall (LOA): 68’0”
Beam: 18’0”
Draft: 4’10”
Weight: 78,000 lbs.
Fuel Capacity: 1,500 gal.
Water Capacity: 400 gal.
Standard Equipment: port and starboard aircraft-style pilothouse doors; Wesmar stabilizer; 15-hp Sidepower bow thruster; Maxwell VWC 3500 windlass; 2/Glendinning Cablemasters; 27-kW Onan genset w/soundshield; Newmar 50-amp battery charger; 3-kW Link 200 inverter w/remote panel; oil exchange system; 37-inch LCD TV w/Bose Surround Sound system in saloon
Test Engines: 2/800-hp Caterpillar 3406E diesel inboards
Transmissions / Ratio: Twin Disc/2.5:1
Props: 39.5x39 4-blade
Steering: Teleflex hydraulic w/power-assist
Controls: Twin Disc electronic
Optional Equipment On Test Boat: 15-hp Sidepower stern thruster; electronics package including KVH 4 satellite TV w/receivers and KVH satphone; CCTV system for engine room and aft deck; Panasonic KXTA 624 4-way phones throughout (SAT, cell, landline, intercom, w/auto switching); Raymarine M1500 GPS/plotter w/monitors on upper and lower stations, RL-80 48 mile open-array radar; two-station ST8001 autopilot, ST-1260 depth, 2/L-760 color digital depthsounders, and 2/VHF radios; Interphase forward-looking sonar; satellite radio system; WSI weatherfax; Wi-Fi computer system w/ wireless keyboard; crew quarters w/separate head and shower; Twin Disc cockpit engine controls
Price As Tested: $1,888,900
Conditions: temperature: 85º; humidity: 84%; wind: 20 mph; seas: 2’-4’; load: 1,094 gal. fuel, 400 gal. water, 4 persons, 900 lbs. gear. Speeds are two-way averages measured w/Stalker radar gun. GPH supplied by CatVision electronic fuel monitoring system. Range: 90% of advertised fuel capacity. Decibels measured on A scale. 65 dB is the level of normal conversation. All measurements taken with trim tabs fully retracted.
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