• Home
  • Cruising Compass Media Advertising & Rates
  • Blue Water Sailing
  • Multihulls Today
  • Contact Us
  • Subscribe Today
Cruising Compass
Launches 0

AMEL 50

By Administrator · On April 19, 2017

AMEL unveils the latest model of its range and announces its official launch at the Cannes Yachting Festival in September 2017.

amel50-interior-render_galley

With this 50 foot model, the La Rochelle shipyard opens the AMEL concept to a new category of clients, with a wide choice of navigation programs. With more accessible dimensions and price, the AMEL 50 is also a high-performance, extremely comfortable yacht, suffused as always with AMEL’s know-how.

Of course, the AMEL 50 is designed to sail around the world. But with her less challenging hull length, access to harbours and marinas becomes easier and navigation possibilities expand. The ideal solution for both short-term and long sea trips.

With this model, the shipyard broadens the scope of use and opens up new prospects at sea. While not aiming to compete with racing yachts, the AMEL 50 promises superb sensations, allowing owners to choose the way they use their boat. A family trip for a relaxing weekend break, a coastal getaway for two or a cruise on the high seas with friends … AMEL 50 is all of the above.

Sloop Rigging is Added to the Range

While they are not abandoning the emblematic ketch design of the La Rochelle shipyard, AMEL has chosen the sloop for this unit. However, this is not a new format as such, as a number of sloops have already left the shipyard in the past.

For architect Olivier Racoupeau: “The development of embedded techniques such as motorized furlers, means that manoeuvring a 50-foot sloop is much easier today and ketch rigging is no longer necessary on a boat of this size.”

AMEL is dedicated to ensuring carefree navigation on its yachts, making enjoyment and tranquillity at sea its top priority for owners. Easy to handle, the AMEL 50 is a genuine AMEL yacht. Tools that facilitate navigation include electric sail furlers and winches, centralized controls in the cockpit and the self-tacking staysail. Navigation safety is ensured by the quality and ingenuity of AMEL construction: rigid cover, deep, protected central cockpit, stainless steel handrail surrounding the deck.

A Redesigned Hull

Among the innovations on this new model, the choice of a straight, powerful bow is a break from the shipyard’s habits. The waterline is extended to improve performance, making the front part of the boat more spacious. The addition of a bow sprit makes it possible to move the anchor and the chain away from the stem, as well as tacking an additional sail such as an asymmetric spinnaker or a code-0.amel50-exterior-render-4

The flat, wide stern, with a midship beam that extends to the rear, offers great dimensional stability and increases comfort at sea. The choice of this feature required twin rudders, something new for AMEL, allowing the boat to maintain great manoeuvrability under sail. Safety is also ensured with the split rudder blade and the positioning of the fully impermeable rudder shafts in the aftpeak.

An inverted deck line: a subtle but important detail in the boat’s design. Good headroom is maintained thanks to the slight convex curve at the midship beam: a bonus point for life on board! Extended by the bow sprit, the inverted deck line refines the profile of the superstructure.

Opening Up Without Losing What is Essential

With this 50-foot sloop, emphasis is on the shipyard’s ability to break with traditional codes while maintaining continuity. While AMEL’s know-how can be detected in every last detail, new horizons are also opening up.

“At AMEL we are all enthusiastic, deeply attached to the history of our shipyard and always striving to continue to express our know-how and perpetuate the AMEL spirit”, says Emmanuel Poujeade, managing director of the shipyard. Team spirit has been omnipresent for this project, involving members of management, in collaboration with the sales and marketing department, the design office and the production team, and last but not least, the discernable brushstroke of the Berret-Racoupeau architectural firm.

The AMEL 50 brings a new silhouette to the range, reflecting the desire for change expressed by the La Rochelle company. While maintaining AMEL brand-specific fundamentals, such as safety and maneuvrability as mentioned above, and remaining faithful to proven expertise, the AMEL 50 will charm those customers interested in evolution but who also remain fond of the brand’s style and elegance.

Outdoor Facilities and Indoor Space

One of the qualities of the central cockpit is that it ensures protection during navigation, thanks to its depth and rigid cover. This open cockpit with ergonomic angles extends to the rear, via sun decks that maximize the outdoor living space.

amel50-exterior-render-3

The new AMEL can accommodate six people, thanks to the two large cabins each with a double bed and one cabin with bunk beds. There is plenty of storage room; under the beds and the benches, in the wardrobes and lockers. The galley, positioned in the starboard passageway, offers a very generous living area in the saloon, maintaining optimal ergonomics. The chart table is located to the left of the entryway and communicates directly with the entire saloon.

Open, bright and refined, everything has been designed to showcase the yacht in keeping with the AMEL spirit. Noble materials have been favored, especially the choice of wood species. Despite being smaller than her predecessors, the work carried out on the horizontal lines enlarges the space inside the AMEL 50. The quest for style and elegance is taken even further with the contrasts created by the different materials used, on which the natural light provided by the large hull portholes and skylight is reflected, and by direct and indirect lighting.

Link to find out more about AMEL 50: www.amel50.com

 

Amel 50
Share Tweet

Administrator

You Might Also Like

  • Boat Reviews

    Dusseldorf 2019

  • Boat Reviews

    The New Oceanis 46.1: The Latest Generation Family Cruiser Debuts This Fall

  • Launches

    Guillaume Verdier: The Frenchman Who is Designing the Future of Sailing

Read the SPRING 2022 Edition of Blue Water Sailing

Recent Posts

  • Thoughts on High-Capacity Bilge Pumps

    June 27, 2022
  • Dining by Boat in Florida

    June 27, 2022
  • Ratatouille Pasta

    June 23, 2022

Please Visit Our Sponsor’s Webpages

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Home
  • Media Advertising & Rates
  • Blue Water Sailing
  • Multihulls Today
  • Archives
  • Contact Us

Published by Blue Water Sailing Media, a division of Day Communications, Inc., Middletown, RI

Publisher & Editor: George Day

Blue Water Sailing Media publishes Blue Water Sailing magazine, Multihulls Today and other titles.

Cruising Compass Advertising Sales:

George Day, Newport, RI
george@bwsailing.com
401-847-7612

 

Recent Posts

  • Thoughts on High-Capacity Bilge Pumps
  • Dining by Boat in Florida
  • Ratatouille Pasta
  • Setting Up a VHF with a MMSI Number
  • What Makes a Good Offshore Cruising Boat
  • Vloggers Gone with the Wynns Buy HH 44 Hybrid Cat
  • 39-Foot Vessel Dismasted 395 Miles Off Virginia Beach During Tropical Storm Alex

Search

© 2014 Blue Water Media. All rights reserved. | Admin