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| Fairline
43 - Datafile |
| LOA:
46ft 3in (14.10m) |
| Beam:
13ft 10in (4.22m) |
| Draught:
3ft 3in (1.00m) |
| Displacement:
9.3 tonnes |
| Fuel
Capacity: 360gal (1,636
litre) |
| Water
Capacity: 118gal (536
litre) |
| Accommodation:
Four/six berths in forecabin,
wheelhouse/saloon, aft cabin; galley; forward and
aft toilet/shower compartments. |
| Engines:
Twin shaftdrive diesels, 312-357hp |
| Built:
1988-1993 |
| MBY
Tested: October 1988 |
| Builder:
Fairline Boats, Oundle, Peterborough |
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MBY
report
Strangely, although Fairline built getting on for 100 43s, you dont
see many in UK waters. Mike Parks of Peters cant remember
the last one the company sold. A conventional flybridge boat of
a type that has always been popular in northern Europe, for some
reason it found its strongest market in the Med.
If the Princess had flexible accommodation, the similar-sized Fairline
43 went one better. The original spec allowed for two layouts, with
a deck saloon on top and a choice of either three cabins or two
and a dinette below. Customers could also have an optional crew/childrens
cabin aft in the space otherwise occupied by the lazarette.
Later on Fairline added a third layout, with just two cabins and
no dinette. This gave a slightly more spacious galley, but more
significantly turned the master cabin into a stateroom, with a much
enlarged ensuite toilet-shower and a walk-in wardrobe. If you wanted
maximum comfort with just two of you on board, this was the one
to go for. Going to the other extreme, the three-cabin-plus-lazarette
layout gave a potential ten permanent or convertible berths
great for unexpected guests or those who refuse to leave the party.
Maybe thats why it was so popular in the Mediterranean.
Engine options were initially 306hp TAMD61s or 357hp TAMD71s, with
the more powerful installation giving a top speed of 28.5 knots
on our test.

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