Otter-BelleHavenMarina
Moderator
Yesterday the family and I took the Otter up to Cutter Marine for to drop off for annual service. We'd also made an appointment with Gary to go for a ride on the new TomCat 255. This is the boat they had at the Balitmore boat show. It was sold then to someone (congratulations, whoever you are!) who agreed to let them hold onto it for a bit and show it to prospective customers. The TC is outfitted with twin Honda 150s, chartplotter, windlass & delta anchor, and radar arch (no radar).
Cold and sunny, we broke through a thin sheet of ice for the first 100 yards or on the way out the creek. The interior is extremely light and airy, with a full length clear door, cabin windows, and high ceiling. There's no step down into the forward berth and no "passageway" into it as with a 22 or 25 cruiser -- the berth is wide open with the curtain drawn back, and from inside it you can look back right through the door to the view in your wake.
Sea conditions were a small chop and light wind (the gods only provide small craft advisory conditions when I go out on the 22, not when I actually hope for them so I can see how the Cat performs). The interior cabin noise at speed is lower than the cruiser because of the lack of any slap coming from the hull. At 27 knots we could converse in normal voices. At top speed (6,500 rpms) we were going about 37 knots, I believe.
At rest or underway, the boat is as stable as a dock. Heavyweights like me and Gary moving from gunwale to gunwale had little discernible effect on the trim.
In sharp turns at speed, the cat tracked beautifully and on level. No outward lean that I've heard about with some cats.
Thumbs up review from all of the Callahans. 5-year-old Claire said, "Daddy, we should buy this boat!" Her parents said maybe some day!
Cold and sunny, we broke through a thin sheet of ice for the first 100 yards or on the way out the creek. The interior is extremely light and airy, with a full length clear door, cabin windows, and high ceiling. There's no step down into the forward berth and no "passageway" into it as with a 22 or 25 cruiser -- the berth is wide open with the curtain drawn back, and from inside it you can look back right through the door to the view in your wake.
Sea conditions were a small chop and light wind (the gods only provide small craft advisory conditions when I go out on the 22, not when I actually hope for them so I can see how the Cat performs). The interior cabin noise at speed is lower than the cruiser because of the lack of any slap coming from the hull. At 27 knots we could converse in normal voices. At top speed (6,500 rpms) we were going about 37 knots, I believe.
At rest or underway, the boat is as stable as a dock. Heavyweights like me and Gary moving from gunwale to gunwale had little discernible effect on the trim.
In sharp turns at speed, the cat tracked beautifully and on level. No outward lean that I've heard about with some cats.
Thumbs up review from all of the Callahans. 5-year-old Claire said, "Daddy, we should buy this boat!" Her parents said maybe some day!