Noble Supervee 685 Centre Cabin Review
As an increasing amount of our fishing areas are taken away from us for no scientific reason, the Australian boat building industry is attempting to adjust. Those that have forever concentrated on small boat manufacture will be forced to evaluate their range of boats to maintain market share.
The old adage of 'the grass is greener on the other side' when applied to our boating pastime, once referred to bigger and better fish out wide. It will come to be that going wide will in the not too distant future, be the only option to catch fish simply because those grounds in close will be locked up with green no-take zones.
So, looking for a big rig? Then check out this one from Noble Engineering - the Supervee 685 Centre Cabin.
We took it for a run on northern Moreton Bay with the intention of going around Cape Moreton and wide to some fairly fishing bottom. This was thwarted by 29kts of wind on the Cape and a swell big enough to keep even small ships at home, so we were relegated to the Bay where 20kts of wind and chop to a metre was on offer.
This boat is a centre cab configuration and access to the walkaround is via a step built onto the forward end of each sidepocket. Once up there, the width of the track allows one to traverse it foot-over-foot with plenty of grabrail on the roof of the cab and around the forequarter gunwales, the latter engineered out of 32mm piping.
The anchor well is massive and will take plenty of ground tackle as well as an anchor retrieve float (a large drum winch could also fit in here). A manufactured oversized bollard is welded to the foredeck.
HARDTOP
The hardened glass windscreen is in two pieces in the front section and has a panel each side. The hardtop is fitted with sail track into which the clears are slid before press studding down. The sail track fixture in many cases provides improved waterproofing over standard zips which tend to leak in driving rain and when taking solid water into the screen. The antennas are installed near the six rod tubes well aft on the top, so there is plenty of room to stow a small dinghy, swags or crab pots. A semi permanent awning of alloy tube and canvas is fixed to the aft end of the hardtop which makes access to rods in the centre of the rocket launcher a little difficult in rough seas, as one has to stand on the gunwale and reach across. A zip opening aperture in the centre of the awning would remedy this.
Those not vertically challenged will appreciate the comfort at the helm where the cabin ceiling is about 1.9m off the deck.
The majority of the dash top is flat and a lip installed across its aft end prevents the contents sliding off onto the deck. Large gimbal mounted electronics could be installed across this area. Garmin's GPS Map 4008 was flush mounted in the dash behind the wheel with a raised bow behind in which Evinrude's instrumentation was installed. A purpose built raised platform between this instrumentation and the windscreen held the compass but unless you were more than 175cm in height, it would be hidden from view when standing. Once seated on the swivel seats it was out of view for anyone of any size.
The swivel seats are atop stand alone modules with stowage within.
Apertures in the helm station liner offered some out of the way stowage for gear and above that on the passenger side, a tray for keys and phones is part of the build.
The entry into the cabin is covered by a rollup curtain that allows the area to be sealed off from spray coming into the cockpit. The footrail for the helm chair is behind this and a zippered flap may be opened to access the feet.
Once inside the cabin the seating is on a vee-berth, which is large enough to sleep an adult each side without an infill for the leg well. An area at the forward end of the leg well is partitionable for the stowage of a portable toilet.
FISHABILITY
At about 72cm off the deck, the gunwales are nice and high for rough water stand-up fishing. Sidepockets are also well off the deck, so there is plenty of foot-under room, although at the transom bulkhead the fascia is vertical to the floor with no foot-under capability. A centrally located wide scupper is installed here along with a livebait tank in its top and a vertical hatch giving access to the battery and engine oil bottle. This model will have a gunwale oil filler port direct to this bottle but was unavailable for installation prior to the test. A neat baitboard is removable by undoing a couple of bolts and next to it a short walkthrough door offers easy access to the marlin board.
A large killtank in the cockpit deck may be flooded or sealed of as required.
PERFORMANCE FIGURES
As tested, the Evinrude provided all the required power and then some. It offered brilliant holeshot and exhibited plenty of torque throughout the throttle range. Ambient noise was not unlike that of the few other brands of four-stroke engines of equivalent horsepower. The fuel flow sensor connected to the Evinrude gave the following figures; 1200rpm produced10kmh for 2.25lt/h;
2800rpm produced 20kmh for 12.3lt/h; 3500rpm produced 42kmh for 41.8lt/h; 4000rpm produced 55kmh for 48.1lt/h; 4500rpm produced 62kmh for 54.0lt/h; and, 5100rpm (WOT) produced 75kmh for 72.0lt/h.
These figures should be viewed as a rough guide only, although the writer has the same sized E-TEC on a 7.4m boat which produces a very similar result.
Manoeuvrability with the 685 is direct and easy on the arms during high-speed, aggressive turns. It is a relatively dry hull with minimal spray on the windscreen even with a good breeze on the forequarter.
It is hard to get a hull that can crash through chop with minimal banging yet be very stable when dead in the water. Noble seem to have got the mix right here.
Trim tabs make life easy in a rough sea and when wind is hard on the beam, so should be part of the initial buy with this rig.
WHAT WE LIKED
Very good stability at rest
Soft ride in the chop
NOT SO MUCH
Difficult access to rods in the rocket launcher
No 'foot-under' space in transom bulkhead
Specifications: Noble Supervee 685 Centre Cabin
HOW MUCH?
Price as tested: $98,500
Options fitted: Radios, spotlights, livebait and deckwash, privacy screen to cabin, front and side clears, hardtop transom door, extended duckboard, winch, and Garmin Map 4008
Priced from: $86,000
GENERAL
Material: Plate aluminium
Length overall: 7.15m
Beam: 2.5m
Weight: 2.2t
CAPACITIES
Fuel: 180lt
People overnight: 2
People day: 8 (protected waters);
6 (open waters).
Rec. max HP: 240
Rec.max engine weight: 340kg
ENGINE
Make/model: Evinrude E-TEC E225DPXSUA
Type: Direct fuel injected two-stroke V-6
Weight: 231kg
Rated HP: 225
Displacement: 3279cc
Gearbox ratio: 1.86:1
Propeller: 19-inch Rebel
SUPPLIED BY
Noble Boats,
19 Brewer Street,
Clontarf, Qld, 4019
Phone: (07) 3283 7061
Fax: (07) 3283 6731
Email: enquiries@nobleengineering.com.au
Website: www.nobleboats.com.au
Originally published in TrailerBoat #226
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