{"id":2430,"date":"2003-04-17T15:03:43","date_gmt":"2003-04-17T15:03:43","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/bwsailing.com\/?p=2430"},"modified":"2003-04-17T15:03:43","modified_gmt":"2003-04-17T15:03:43","slug":"kanter-54-5","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.bwsailing.com\/bw\/kanter-54-5\/","title":{"rendered":"Kanter 54.5"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-2433\" title=\"Threshold\" src=\"http:\/\/bwsailing.com\/bw\/wp-content\/uploads\/2003\/04\/thresholdsail.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"370\" height=\"460\" \/>Kanter 54.5 \u2022 <\/strong>strong, nimble and  aluminum\u2014is slated to carry a crew of two on an upcoming extended world  cruise. BWS joined Steve and Karyn James aboard Threshold for a 300-mile  shakedown from Greenwich, Conn., to Annapolis, Md.<\/p>\n<p>Got any dinner plans this evening?\u201d asks captain and<br \/>\nowner Steve, as details of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge sharpen to the southeast.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cNo,\u201d I reply, drooling at the thought of crabs and buttered  silver-queen corn, Old Bay seasoning raining down from the heavens  above, and pools of cold local brew bubbling among tall grasses.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cGood. Let\u2019s mess around out here for a while. Crack off to a beam reach. Karyn, ease the genny. I\u2019ve got the main.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In variable breezes common to an autumn afternoon on the bay,  Thresh-old\u2019s versatility shines. Not only is she a solid passagemaker  and a comfortable boat to live aboard, as she has proven again and again  over the past two days on Blue Water Sailing\u2019s 300-mile trip to the  Chesapeake from Connecticut, but what\u2019s more she sails like a demon, handles sweetly and moves well in light airs. Does it get any better than this?<\/p>\n<p>Threshold is a Kanter 54.5, the latest in Chuck Paine\u2019s celebrated  Bermuda series of light-displacement, high-performance cruising yachts.  True to the tradition of the line, she is a long and relatively narrow  boat, with a bulb keel and deep rudder\u2014plus a true pilothouse and an  engine big enough to power a comparable motorsailer. She\u2019s got a fine  forefoot to pierce the water and a flattish bottom as you move aft to  keep resistance down, with sections deep enough to avoid pounding and a  powerful raked bow on a rising sheer to mitigate water on deck. Moderate  beam carries aft to a reverse transom. Aims of the design include  maximizing performance by stretching the length\/beam ratio while  maintaining sufficient heft toward the stern, and enhancing stability by  keeping ballast low and centered. The result is a quick, comfortable  boat that remains stiff in a breeze, spares the autopilot or skipper\u2019s  forearms and won\u2019t get tossed around a lot in following conditions.<\/p>\n<p>The vessel is constructed of aluminum at Kanter Yachts in St. Thomas,  Ontario, Canada. Paine and Kanter have collaborated for close to a dozen  years; it has been a very fruitful arrangement, demonstrated most  recently by the striking Bougainvillea collection from Paine\u2019s Bermuda  series of which Threshold and her 62-foot inspiration Dawnbreaker, also  built by Kanter, are both members. Paine understands and appreciates  aluminum as a boatbuilding material that lends itself to custom  fabrication, light weight and strength. Manfred Kanter not only shares  Paine\u2019s dedication to custom work, personally overseeing each Kanter  project, but also his view of a \u201cproper yacht,\u201d which \u201cshould be fast  enough to outrun a storm, yet strong enough to sail through one. It must  be spacious and comfortable, and it must reflect the owner\u2019s personal  style.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Steve and Karyn James, looking for a \u201csafe, comfortable cruising boat  that two people can handle, one that is also a sailing machine\u201d and  features a pilothouse, found the ideal designer\/builder team for their  vision in the Paine\/Kanter connection. At the top of their priority list  was ensuring that they themselves be intimately involved in the  process. With 50 years of sailing experience between them including two  noteworthy projects previously undertaken by Steve\u2014the building of a  Westsail 32 and a rebuild of a Bob Perry\u2013designed Tatoosh 42\u2014they knew  what they wanted. And they wanted to get it right, the first time. This  is their retirement home after all, and they\u2019re heading for shores far  and wide.<\/p>\n<p>Well, get it right they did, thanks to three years of dreaming,  working with Paine on the design, researching existing Kanter yachts and  enjoying the cooperation of the yard. After making six visits to  monitor the boat\u2019s progress, they lived at the site for the final 45  days of construction, putting their hands on, and two cents into, every  last detail.<\/p>\n<p>A moderate-aspect fin keel ends in a bulb that might be described as  pure sculpture\u2014shaped like a torpedo from the front, it diminishes to a  flat plate on the trailing edge. The space-age foil, along with a deep  seven-foot rudder, provides lift and minimizes drag which contributes to  heightened upwind performance. The deep rudder works in concert with  the boat\u2019s relatively wide stern, keeping her attached to a following  sea and diminishing the threat of hobby-horsing. Concentrating the  ballast in a bulb moderates the draft, allowing Threshold to enter  anchorages that otherwise would be out of bounds for a vessel her size.<\/p>\n<p>A quick look at the numbers confirms Paine\u2019s design ethos: The Kanter  54.5 is a capable, spirited performer though hardly a tricked-out racing  yacht. She exists somewhere in between\u2014built solidly, furnished with  the rig, waterline and appendages she needs to sail well without  compromising safety or comfort.<\/p>\n<p>Sail Area\/Displacement (SA\/D) at 16.16 places Threshold in the middle  to upper range for performance cruisers. Comparatively she falls close  to the new Moody 54, for example, at 16.51, and beneath the powerful  J\/160 at 22.2. This bodes well for light winds\u2014especially when you  factor in sail area beyond what is represented by the 100-percent  foretriangle measurement used in a standard SA\/D calculation, area  conferred by genoa overlap, a drawing staysail and the lightweight  reacher at the ready in its sock in the sail locker. At the same time,  it is moderate enough for the boat to remain manageable for a crew of  two, or even one\u2014the James\u2019s plan on competing in their third Bermuda  One-Two in June. Cockpit-led reefing, dial-in furling headsails,  sufficient beam and a good 36-percent ballast ratio help ensure this.<\/p>\n<p>Dispacement\/Length (D\/L) calculates to 189, placing Threshold well  within the ranks of light and responsive cruisers. Again for comparative  reference, the Moody 54 shows a respectable 201, the J\/160 a bantam  130. Being aluminum allows her to achieve these benefits without  sacrificing strength or safety\u2014the outer hull ranges in thickness from  1\/4 inch in the freeboard area to 5\/8 inch at the keel interface. As  non-dimensionals go, a D\/L of 189 suggests that the boat is brawny  enough to provide a comfortable motion at sea while light enough to  achieve good quickness, acceleration and speed.<\/p>\n<p>A noteworthy Bermuda-series signature is the pilothouse, likened by  Paine to the porch he built on his old Maine farmhouse. It\u2019s a great  go-between, a place to get your bearings and to gear up before engaging  the elements, a place to remain on watch should there be no immediate  need to go outside, to unwind and shed<br \/>\nwet oilskins, to nap if you want to be available to those on deck.  Virtual-ly every activity\u2014navigating, steering, watchkeeping, eating and  sleeping, can take place in the pilothouse; indeed Steve spends much of  his time there while under way.<\/p>\n<p>With an eye on safety and functionality, Paine has designed  Threshold\u2019s pilothouse, as he has those of his entire Bermuda series, so  that it can be sealed from the cockpit and the main cabin sealed from  it\u2014double insurance, as it were, by way of a hinged door and sliding  hatch aft and conventional hatchboards with a sliding top forward. This  way, the chamber can be kept dryish and climate controlled while still  maintaining vessel integrity\u2014should any water breach the pilothouse  through a broken window or open hatch, it is kept from fouling or  flooding the sacred environment belowdecks.<\/p>\n<p>About half of the projects Paine takes on now are aluminum, for three  simple reasons: First, as mentioned, its strength-to-weight ratio is  unbeatable and allows him to design a light-displacement boat without  sacrificing durability or structural integrity. Second, when designing a  one-off of good size, working in aluminum is cheaper than working in  fiberglass: You don\u2019t have to build tooling and changes can be  incorporated more easily. And third, the medium encourages owner  participation\u2014as Paine says himself, \u201cIf you\u2019re building a metal boat,  why not customize it to fit your needs and desires?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>INTERIOR AND SYSTEMS<br \/>\nBelowdecks, the James\u2019s idea of a comfortable, practical floating home  takes form. They will be moving aboard soon and plan on making most  passages without additional crew. Indeed, can you think of a better  two-person crew than these, a jet pilot and a physician\u2019s assistant?  Therefore, they put a premium on storage and functional space, replacing  the aft cabin with a huge engine\/systems room and dedicating the space  from well abaft Station 1 forward to a deck-accessible sail locker and  separate chain locker. Both the fore and aft areas are sealed from the  main living space by watertight bulkheads.<\/p>\n<p>Entering the pilothouse, there is a settee to starboard and a  forward-facing chart table with instruments, flat screen and VHF. A  cushioned athwart-ships divider serves as a backrest while sitting at  the desk, or as a place over which to drape your knees while reclining.  To port, a U-shaped settee surrounds a folding table. All cushions are  covered in high-wear, water\/sun\/stain-resistant Ultraleather.  Snakelights and 12-volt DC fans hang from the corners, and the  aft-facing windows are removable to induce airflow in the tropics.<\/p>\n<p>Moving through the companion way, the main cabin greets you warmly in  classic Herreshoff fashion\u2014white bulkheads and surfaces accented by  cherry and ash woodwork, cranberry cushions and brass fittings.  Immediately to port is a crew\u2019s cabin with two snug sea berths. The  James\u2019s typically sleep here, in the pilothouse or even in the cockpit  on passage, saving the luxurious V-berth forward for calm nights  underway, at anchor or in a slip. Access to the engine room is gained  through a watertight door in this cabin.<\/p>\n<p>Further access to the spacious engine\/systems compartment happens  through the hinged port cockpit seat. A formidable 100-horsepower Yanmar  turbo turning a V-drive sits on mounts amidships, with superior access  to all parts of the engine from the injectors down to the PYI dripless  shaft seal. The installation nearly vaults Threshold into the realm of  motorsailer, enabling her to cruise under power at eight knots. The  rudder post, as big around as a genetically-altered grapefruit and  surrounded by a volcano of aluminum supports and brackets, inspires  confidence, and that feeling is amplified when you look up at the  steering system\u2019s huge quadrant connected by cables led as directly as  possible from the helm above and overseen by a pair of identical  Raytheon hydraulic autopilots. Marelon seacocks plug the thru-hulls,  with properly sized bungs standing by.<\/p>\n<p>CruiseAir reverse-cycle air conditioning\/heating, Webasto diesel  heating, hydraulics and a SeaLand Va-cuFlush system are readily  accessible with well-marked plumbing and wiring. Through removable  panels you gain access to the boat\u2019s six 8-D batteries, inverter and  air\/water dual-cooled refrigeration system. Commonsense items such as  dual fuel filters and an oil-change pump facilitate maintenance. A 6 kW  Northern Lights generator and a high-output alternator keep the boat\u2019s  batteries well topped. Threshold is wired for solar, and the plumbing is  in place for a watermaker.<\/p>\n<p>A U-shaped fore-and-aft galley is located to starboard as you descend  the companionway steps, with double sinks inboard on centerline and a  SeaFrost refrigerator with top and front access; a separate freezer  compartment expands provisioning parameters. The cabinetry has been  customized to fit Threshold\u2019s dishware. Aft of the galley is a  voluminous pantry with washer\/dryer aft and the circuit board and an  engine access panel on the inboard bulkhead.<\/p>\n<p>Across from the galley athwartships is the aft head, complete with  sumped shower\/wet locker, freshwater pressure-tap and foot-pump, and a  VacuFlush head that uses only one pint of fresh water per flush.  Throughout the boat, ventilation is excellent, with 11 hatches and eight  Dorades. Hatches in the galley and heads open aft to protect gas burner  flames and to whisk odors and heat out of the boat.<\/p>\n<p>The starboard side of the saloon is devoted to an office\u2014a large desk  complete with flat-screen computer, printer, file cabinet and  bookshelves, flanked by luxurious swivel chairs. The boat\u2019s charts,  stowed in three horizontal drawers at the base of the V-berth, can be  surveyed here or on the adjacent folding dining table, which seats six  and within which you can store tall bottles or stacked cans. The  gorgeous forward cabin features a berth that can be accessed from either  side, a closet and a manual Raritan head.<\/p>\n<p>ON DECK<br \/>\nNot surprisingly, the cockpit is designed to be ergonomically sound.  The wheel is wide enough for the helms-person to see around the  pilothouse from a seated position. A folding cockpit table fabricated of  stainless steel includes a sturdy bar at its base that acts as a  convenient foot chock when heeling. There are good hand-holds everywhere  you want them\u2014in fact, each step from saloon to helm is a secure one.  The two drains under the helm have been super-sized to guard against  cockpit flooding. The starboard bench opens to a large lazarette with  plenty of room for safety gear and removable panels for access to the  refrigeration and the engine. Two 20-pound propane tanks reside under  the helmsperson\u2019s seat.<\/p>\n<p>Steps on Threshold\u2019s reverse transom lead to a platform, complete with  swim ladder and heated freshwater hose. However, the helm does not feel  open to the sea as is often the case with this setup; stainless  railings continue all the way around the stern, with a gate in the  middle. A large locker under the steps has space for scuba gear and  fenders. To increase cockpit security even more, the James\u2019s are  considering replacing the radar tower that now stands on the port hip  with a stern arch that would come forward to connect with the  pilothouse, making a cage around the helm and a great Bimini support.<\/p>\n<p>Moving around the deck is a secure experience, aided by stainless  railings that run to the forward edge of the pilothouse, handholds on  the roof, Dorade guards, beefy shrouds and the boom rack\u2014something that  we\u2019ll be seeing more of no doubt. It consists of aluminum bars welded to  the boom every two feet or so, running perpendicular to the boom and  slightly upward, supporting a long rail that runs parallel to the boom  and meets it at 45 degree angles fore and aft.<\/p>\n<p>A very impressive anchor setup designed by Steve graces the bow. Two  massive anchors, one 80 pounds and the other 66, hang clear of the hull  over equally massive rollers, held in place by thick pins at their heads  and chain stops aft. When deployed, the pins are installed to keep the  chain from popping off the roller. Both can be raised or lowered by the  Maxwell 3500 windlass. Both salt- and freshwater hoses make clean-up a  breeze. The chain locker, which holds 275 feet of 3\/8-inch chain and 150  feet of 3\/4-inch double- braid rode for the primary anchor (30 and 250  feet, respectively, for the secondary), is separated from the sail  locker to avoid fouling.<\/p>\n<p>RIG AND SAILPLAN<br \/>\nThreshold is a three-spreader, cutter-rigged, masthead sloop. Her rig  and sailplan are the yang counterpoint to her yin underside\u2014together  they create the fast, well-mannered performance yacht that she is. The  aluminum spar is positioned forward in the sloop configuration, with an  inner forestay added so she can shift gears in varying conditions.  Furling headsails, cockpit-led running rigging and a smooth Antal system  of cars and blocks allow dial-in reefing protocol. A conventional-hoist  full-batten main falls through lazy jacks to rest in the nest provided  by<br \/>\nthe boom rack. The James\u2019s chose this method over in-mast or in-boom  furling, deeming these systems problematic (having once stood on the top  spreader in a howl to kick a jammed in-mast mainsail free, I must  agree). For light air, a free-flying lightweight reacher is tacked at  the stemhead.<\/p>\n<p>This sailplan is supported by hydraulic backstay and vang, running  backs, stout shrouds and the two forestays. Mast steps reach to the  first spreader to access spreader lights, hailer and mainsail hardware,  and to provide a lookout for coral heads and reefs; two more near the  top of the mast mean you can stand securely all the way aloft. There are  four Andersen electric winches in the cockpit and one on the coach roof  on centerline aft of the mast. The latter does service as a midships  capstan\u2014well placed to manipulate the reacher halyard, to hoist someone  aloft or to control a long, taut spring line when you\u2019re getting blown  off a dock.<\/p>\n<p>ON TEST<br \/>\nOn our two-and-a-half-day trip, Threshold encountered a variety of  conditions. She is a very steady, surefooted boat, keen to keep good way  on and to track confidently. Off Atlantic City on the New Jersey shore  in 25-to-30 knots with a swell off the starboard quarter, she behaved  well with a single reef and full staysail. She put negligible strain on  the autopilot or helmsperson, and moved along solidly at  eight-and-a-half to 10 knots. On a reach in 23 knots she made  nine-and-a-half knots on rails. Closer to the wind, the lift from her  foils helped her tack crisply and easily through 90 degrees and carry on  with very little weather helm. The sailplan proved easy to manage;  indeed, watching Karyn steer the boat in light air just off of Sandy  Hook while Steve retrieved the reacher from the sail locker, set it up,  released it from its ATN sock and ultimately reversed the entire  process, was joy to a shorthanded sailor\u2019s heart. Reefing of all sails  went smoothly and efficiently.<\/p>\n<p>An afternoon spent tacking around the Chesapeake Bay offered the best  glimpse of Threshold\u2019s versatility. She is very responsive and comes  back easily from a luff. One incident in particular really drove this  point home. Two sailboats were making their way toward Baltimore on a  track that would take them across our bow. In eight knots of breeze as  we gave way, we headed up into the wind and danced the dance of luffing  sails to let them pass. She maintained way and showed incredible control  throughout the maneuver, as the helmsman of one of the passing boats  noticed and was compelled to acknowledge through the afternoon air,  \u201cCouldn\u2019t do that in my boat!\u201d Once they were clear, we fell back onto  our board with a mere suggestion from the helm. As the wind speed  dropped to five knots true, she still made three-and-a-half through the  water and sped up steadily when the wind increased, gaining about a knot  for every two of wind speed until she was doing six knots in 10 knots  true. As it rose into the high teens she accelerated, using her momentum  and balanced design to make 10 knots through the water.<\/p>\n<p>Another good test of a boat\u2019s performance is sailing upwind with the  mainsail alone. Doing this in 12 knots of breeze at 30 degrees apparent,  Threshold responded in kind, making four knots and maintaining control  and tracking.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-medium wp-image-2434\" title=\"Kantor \" src=\"http:\/\/bwsailing.com\/bw\/wp-content\/uploads\/2003\/04\/lines-237x300.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"237\" height=\"300\" \/>BWS THOUGHTS<br \/>\nThreshold is a superior blue-water sailing yacht. In the right  conditions she\u2019ll make 200-mile days and more, she\u2019ll survive a  collision and she\u2019ll provide comfort almost to the point of  luxuriousness. The collaboration between the James\u2019s, Paine and Kanter  has been a great success; they took a dream and made a boat out of it.<\/p>\n<p>Customizing a boat affords great freedom and satisfaction. It\u2019s like  playing with a full deck of cards, including jokers. You\u2019re not limited  to the jacks, threes and queens common to most modern production boats;  you can pepper the equation with aces and wild cards yanked from the  sleeves of experience and innovation to turn an uninspiring anchor setup  or humdrum saloon into something that truly fits your needs and  desires. As Steve puts it, customizing a yacht is \u201ca fantasy, a dream, a  nightmare.\u201d After sailing with this couple, hearing about the genesis  of the boat and considering their future plans, it is clear that the  experience for them has gone the way of the two former options, and that  the latter has reared its head just enough to root the whole thing in  reality and make each decision a conscious one.<\/p>\n<p>LOA 54\u20196\u201d<br \/>\nLWL 47\u20190\u201d<br \/>\nBeam 15\u20193\u201d<br \/>\nBWL 12\u20198\u201d<br \/>\nDraft 6\u20199\u201d<br \/>\nBallast 16,000 lbs.<br \/>\nDispl. 44,000 lbs.<br \/>\nSA (100%) 1,259 sq. ft.<br \/>\nAir draft 75\u20192\u201d<br \/>\nBallast\/Displ. 36 %<br \/>\nDispl.\/Length 189<br \/>\nSA\/Displ. 16.16<br \/>\nLPS (IMS) 125 degrees<br \/>\nPer inch immersion 2,200 lbs.<br \/>\nFuel 220 gal.<br \/>\nWater 200 gal.<br \/>\nAuxiliary Yanmar 4JH2&#8211;UTBE 100 hp<br \/>\nBase price $775,000<\/p>\n<p>Designer<br \/>\nChuck Paine<br \/>\nC.W. Paine Yacht Design Inc<br \/>\nPO Box 763<br \/>\nCamden, ME 04843<br \/>\nPh: 207-236-2166<br \/>\nFax: 207-236-4108<br \/>\n<a href=\"http:\/\/www.chuckpaine.com\" target=\"_blank\">www.chuckpaine.com<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Builder<br \/>\nKanter Yachts<br \/>\n11 Barrie Blvd.<br \/>\nSt. Thomas, Ontario<br \/>\nN5P 4B9, Canada<br \/>\nPh: 519-633-1058<br \/>\nFax: 519-633-8138<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Kanter 54.5 \u2022 strong, nimble and aluminum\u2014is slated to carry a crew of two on an upcoming extended world cruise. BWS joined Steve and Karyn James [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-2430","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-boat-reviews"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.bwsailing.com\/bw\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2430","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.bwsailing.com\/bw\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.bwsailing.com\/bw\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.bwsailing.com\/bw\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.bwsailing.com\/bw\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2430"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.bwsailing.com\/bw\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2430\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.bwsailing.com\/bw\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2430"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.bwsailing.com\/bw\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2430"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.bwsailing.com\/bw\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2430"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}