Boat test for the 2003 San Juan 48 Convertible with boat pictures, boat specifications, and boat test results. Includes pricing, videos, engine test reviews, and ratings for the 2003 San Juan 48 Convertible.

 
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HOME  >  BOAT TESTS  >  SAN JUAN  >  2003 SAN JUAN 48 CONVERTIBLE
 BOAT TEST: 2003 San Juan 48 Convertible
BOAT SPECIFICATIONS
Boat Type: Down East
Base Price: $1.5 million
Standard Power: 2/825-hp MTU Series 60 diesel inboards
Optional Power: none
Length Overall (LOA): 51'2"
Beam: 15'6"
Draft: 2'9"
Weight: 32,000 lbs.
Fuel Capacity: 750 gal.
Water Capacity: 120 gal.
Standard Equipment: Muir Atlantic 2500 windlass; 8-hp SidePower bow and stern thrusters; hydraulic sunroof; folding composite mast; Standard Horizon Intrepid+ 1270S VHF; Simrad AP22 autopilot; Furuno NavNet color radar/plotter/sounder; ACR spotlight; teak cockpit, pilothouse, and swim-platform decks; flat-screen TVs and DVD players in galley and master; 3-burner Force 10 cooktop; Sharp microwave oven; Norcold refrigerator; Origo dishwasher; Broan trash compactor; Splendide Comb-o-matic 2000 washer/dryer; SeaLand MSDs; 18-gal. Force 10 water heater; granite countertops; Northern Lights 12-kW genset; Village Marine 600-gpd watermaker; Tides Marine dripless shaft (and rudder stock) logs; Glendinning CableMaster; 3/Rule 3,700-gph auto. bilge pumps w/Ultra float switches; customized Bennett trim tabs; 9 1/2 Zodiac RIB w/6-hp Honda 4-stroke outboard
Test Engines: 2/825-hp MTU Series 60 diesel inboards
Transmissions / Ratio: Twin Disc V5114/1.52:1
Props: 27"x36" 4-blade Nibral Austral
Steering: Marol rotary-actuated hydraulic
Controls: Detroit Diesel DDEC electronic
Optional Equipment On Test Boat: none
Price As Tested: $1.5 million
Conditions: temperature: 70ยบ; humidity: 100%; wind: 5-10 mph; seas: 2'-3'; load: 700 gal. fuel, 120 gal. water, 3 persons, 1,000 lbs. gear. Speeds are two-way averages measured w/Stalker radar gun. GPH measured with DDEC fuel-monitoring equipment. 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.

By Capt. Bill Pike

Holy smokes!" I exclaimed while pouring the coal to San Juan's new 48 Motor Yacht, a sleek, blue beauty with the styling machismo of a Maine lobster boat, the fit and finish of a jet-set Italian villa, and the engineering subtleties of a BMW 7-Series sedan. Did this baby perform or what? She was virtually leaping on plane!

A grin enlivened my countenance. In seconds the boat was swooping across the choppy surface of Fidalgo Bay like a low-flying fighter plane, with whitecaps blurring past, picturesque Anacortes, Washington, in the background, and her Series 60 MTUs purring away like big, contented 825-hp kittens. I glanced down at the readout on the Furuno NavNet. Top speed: 45 mph or thereabouts. I could hardly believe my eyes. Already? The sense of control I enjoyed—and the tranquil ambiance at the helm—were indicative of a much gentler pace.

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

A rousing turn seemed in order. With an index finger I rotated the destroyer-type wheel to starboard tentatively, then (quite satisfied with the result) spun it with a vengeance, ultimately carving a tight, foaming white crescent in the cold, blue waters of the bay. For the pure livin' heck of it, I then carved two more hard-over crescents and a half-dozen compact figure-eights, every one a joy. Such wholehearted agility, enlivened by a constant sense of seamless solidity underfoot, was more fun than a barrel of boat-show tickets, of course, but it was also evocative of a strong, integrated approach to construction.

The 48 is composed of just four basic parts: hull, deck, interior liner, and superstructure. All are vacuum-infused using pricey E-glass, CoreCell coring, a high-end hybrid epoxy-vinylester resin, and in the hull alone, lots of impact-resistant Kevlar. Combine such a highly technical, lightweight assemblage into a single, unibody chunk, add four, cored-glass, watertight structural bulkheads, a PVC foam-filled E-glass stringer grid, and a box-type hull-to-deck joint, both chemically bonded and mechanically fastened, and what results is a sensation of pure, velvet-gloved brawn underway, despite the boat having a mere 32,000-pound displacement.

But construction's not the entire story. The 48's propulsion system also plays a major role in her performance. Rather than the waterjets and computerized joystick-type engine controls that hallmark boats from competing companies, San Juan opts for a straightforward approach: inboard diesels routed through close-coupled V-drives to straight shafts, with big props in tunnels and big rudders for lots of steering control, especially in following seas. Single-lever DDEC electronic sticks at the helm put the finishing touches on the package.

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