90' Superyacht sportfish "SATU" Built in New Zealand will be at this years Yacht & Brokerage show in Miami. For further details contact Richard Newhauser +1305 467 5797 rnewhauser@satumarine.com - richard.newhauser@gmail.com
Veo muchos comentarios negativos aquí como si fueran carpinteros de barcos , les comento algo .. el yate de ese tamaño q no moje su espejo de popa los motores no tienen fuerza , y para los q más SAVEN , este diseño está valorado como auténtico , tiene el casco hecho a médica con la cabina y está hecho para ser una dinámica en todas sus medidas , a diferencia de Viking o Hatteras ninguno tiene buena cimetria , las cabinas son más altas y grandes q el casco , simplemente esto es un misil en el mar 💪
Looks nice, but how is it in a bit of a sea? Every boat looks and runs well in calm conditions... look how wet the aft deck is even then! I bet this is one very wet boat in anything more than calm conditions... and good fising is in rough seas.
Is it just me that thinks this is too much boat for its intended purpose? For fishing I'd want something smaller and more maneuverable. For yachting I'd want something built more for yachting. It seems they're trying to appeal to two different categories, and they're likely to please neither.
This didn’t age well. Years later, tournaments are being won with boats this size. Besides, you only know _one_ of its intended purposes based on appearance. Maybe this person likes leisure trips too. We can’t all be Jeff Bezos and have two vessels
@@timothy4011 LMAO, the comment aged just fine, and who do you think owns 90ft sportfish yachts? It's the Jeff Bezos of the world that buy the biggest fishing boat they can find to go along with their other yachts because they don't know any better. As for winning tournaments, of course some will be won by them, that doesn't mean they're the best boat for the job.
Thank you very much for the information you sent me, it was very informative and we all loved the video. It is an amazing yacht and we wish you all the best finding it a happy home.
Just saw her jammed up in a canal off the New RIver in Ft. Laud. FL . Great SPOFISH but should be in better conditions for a 10M yacht. Note to Owner.. Don't be soo cheap!
Nice looking boat, but way too heavy. Front needs to be out of the water. Looks like it needs to lose 20k plus pounds or more. The bow is plowing. Bigger screws may help as well as a diet.
All good points about how wet this boat looks.... compare this boat at about 2:50 to this one (ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-iA5O_YySd1A.html) at about at about the 2min 25s mark. Plus there is something odd looking about that wake at 2:36 This is nice to look at but I don't think it compares to the big Viking or Hatteras yachts
I agree, also no bow flare, and the stern is riding way to low for the size of the boat too. It must have too much weight on board. imagine taking a big following sea on the bar at hatteras inlet or taking it into jupiter inlet on a rough day. Would be taking a bath.
James Griffin keep in mind the thing weighs 18 tons and it's motors are even heavier considering they're in the stern therefore all the weight is in the stern and lowers it
BIOHAZARD-42 I'm sure that vessel weighs a lot more than 18 tons. It still rides really wet compared to a large Viking or Hatteras. You shouldn't be taking a bath on the stern of a vessel that size while underway in calm seas.
vessel should have life lines or rail, in this size category. also needs a few more chocks along the gunwale, for springlines, and a hawsehole at the bow; larger bow cleats, perhaps mounted on reinforcement pads. very nice boat, however. very pleasant overall.
verry good and you boat tahitien paradis i love you boat satu good by my nam julien iaorana satu (tres belle bateau pour tahiti en tourist ia manuia tona tere aloha
You're an idiot. The reason the deck is wet is this mysterious thing called condensation. When in a wet environment, the dew point causes water to form on the deck, oh you know what, it's not worth explaining, you're too stupid to get it. Simple terms: deck is wet because wet stuff form on teak. Teak (that brown stuff in the stern) is also varnished on a regular basis. Was that caveman enough for you?
Well just to clarify, we wet the cockpit teak for the photo shoot and I have just steamed her back from Panama in a 3-4m swell at 20 knots and she is smooth and dry....at least you don't need an ice pick to get to the galley from the cockpit like most sport fish boats. Thanks for the comment.