Boat test for the 2008 Altima 56 with boat pictures, boat specifications, and boat test results. Includes pricing, videos, engine test reviews, and ratings for the 2008 Altima 56.

 
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HOME  >  BOAT TESTS  >  ALTIMA  >  2008 ALTIMA 56
 BOAT TEST: 2008 Altima 56
BOAT SPECIFICATIONS
Boat Type: Sportfisherman
Base Price: $1,249,000
Standard Power: 2/575-hp Cummins QSM11 diesel inboards
Optional Power: 2/670-hp or 2/715-hp Cummins QSM11 or 2/800-mhp Caterpillar C15 diesel inboards
Length Overall (LOA): 57'10"
Beam: 17'4"
Draft: 4'8"
Weight: 58,000 lbs. (dry)
Fuel Capacity: 900 gal.
Water Capacity: 250 gal.
Standard Equipment: 17-kW Onan genset w/ soundshield; Tide dripless shafts; 2/Glendinning CableMasters; 5/2,000-gph Johnson Pumps bilge pumps; SmartCraft electronic engine monitor; Phase Three and Charles battery chargers; Maxwell 1200 windlass; central vacuum system; 80,000-Btu Marine Air A/C; Cantalupi lighting; GE Commercial Series microwave/convection oven, 3-burner cooktop, garbage disposal, refrigerator-freezer; 3/Sealand Magnum Opus MSDs; 2/Tracy helm chairs; Malber washer-dryer; solid teak-and-holly sole on main deck
Test Engines: 2/715-hp Cummins QSM11 diesel inboards
Transmissions / Ratio: ZF-325 1A/2.04:1
Props: 32x32 4-blade nibral
Steering: Teleflex hydraulic
Controls: Glendinning electronic
Optional Equipment On Test Boat: add'l 9-kW Onan genset w/ soundshield; 10.5-hp Side-Power bow and stern thrusters; Algae-X FPS 500 fuel-polishing system; hardtop w/ enclosure; 4/Sub-Zero refrigerator-freezer drawers; 3/LCD TV, DVD player, and AM/FM stereo/CD player systems; U-Line refrigerator-freezer and Jenn-Air electric barbecue on bridge; Opacmare 3310 hydraulic swim platform
Price As Tested: $1,395,200

By Richard Thiel

Who among us has not, after boarding dozens of boats and talking to dozens of salespeople, wished we could just design and build our next boat ourselves so she would be exactly the way we want her? Well, that's precisely the position Frank Scortino found himself in some eight years ago. An experienced boater and successful businessman from Montreal, he was looking for a 50-something-foot motoryacht similar to those being offered in the Pacific Northwest: a pilothouse design with substantial bulwarks, good seakeeping, three staterooms, and a decent turn of speed. He couldn't find one.

So he roughed out his own design and then set out to find someone who could translate his sketches into a set of working drawings and, preferably, build it. A boating friend recommended a yard in Taiwan that was owned and operated by Charles Chang, a veteran builder who had experience with exactly such vessels. Chang was able to fine-tune the sketches, supply Scortino with a hull, and build his boat, a 56-footer. End of story?

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

Not quite. Unfortunately (or as it turned out, fortunately) one of Scortino's friends saw the drawings and, deciding the boat was perfect for him, made Scortino an offer he couldn't refuse and purchased the boat before she was finished, leaving Scortino with a nice profit but still boatless. So he had Chang build him another one. And someone bought that boat. The same thing happened again and again, and before he knew it, Scortino was in the boatbuilding business, without ever intending to be.

Chang's yard eventually moved to China, where it's now called Activa, and Scortino added other models to what became the Altima line of yachts: a 45, 53, 61, and 68. Soon a part-time venture had become a full-time business. Today, having built 24 of those 56-footers, Scortino has a new version of the boat on his hands, which serendipitously came to him thanks to decisions another boat buyer made. A customer had contracted to build a 56 but decided halfway through the build process that he wanted the 68 instead. Of course, Scortino was delighted to accommodate him, but that left him with a stock boat that was different from any of the 56s that preceded her.

At this point an explanation of Altima's build philosophy is probably helpful. First, the company does not build stock boats. It really doesn't need to because the yard is so efficient, it can deliver all but the 68 in nine months or less from the date of signing. (The 68 takes a year.) Second, Altima is a semicustom builder. Although it offers standard versions of each model, it's happy to modify them to suit individual taste—basically it will do anything short of move bulkheads.

The owner of this 56 took full advantage of such flexibility. Desiring to build what he termed a "mini expedition yacht," he eliminated the lower station (ironically, one of the very features that began Scortino's original quest) in favor of a dinette that, instead of running fore and aft, now turns to starboard and extends past centerline. To compensate for the loss of the lower station, he ordered the optional hardtop and full soft bridge enclosure and reverse-cycle bridge air conditioning. So configured, it is a convivial, all-weather gathering place.

The conviviality extends below. Here those seated at the dinette can converse with the chef and enjoy a fine view aft (as well on all other points), because the owner also opted for four Sub-Zero refrigerator/freezer drawers on the aft leg of the U-shape galley, instead of the standard 23-cubic-foot upright refrigerator that normally occupies the outboard leg. In so doing he had to give up refrigerator capacity but did gain a cabin-side window where the upright was.

This configuration probably wouldn't have worked—certainly not for a couple—were it not for three things. One, the 56 comes with a staircase to port that allows quick transit between the bridge and the main deck. Two, a pantographic door to starboard (a port one is optional) gives out onto wide side decks protected by high bulwarks. Thus a helmsman can quickly and safely reach any area onboard during nearly any kind of weather. But thanks to a third, optional feature, the owner of this 56 may never need to.

The Docking Master wireless controller allows anyone to maneuver a boat in just about any manner that does not require throttle input. Besides being a helluva lot of fun to play with, it makes the 56 a bonafide two-person boat, which it might not be minus it. That's because sightlines to the transom are blocked by the 8 1⁄2-foot-long bridge overhang/tender deck, which shelters the entire cockpit. With Docking Master, a task that would've ended in shouting and gnashing of teeth (especially docking stern-to) becomes a serene one-man job.

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