5 minute read

Stessco Albacore CC560 with Yamaha F130 4-stroke

s.morgan@fishingmonthly.com.au

As the video tests on our Fishing Monthly YouTube channel begin to age, we start to see plenty of comments about the difference in the price of boats pre-and post COVID.

I suppose I can understand the remorse in not buying a boat a couple of years earlier if you are shopping for a decent sized rig now. But the fact is that none of us have a time machine. If you do, I’ve got a few lotto numbers to send back to myself in 2019.

It’s also unavoidable that post COVID, there has been don’t care about this and your stuff gets wet. Always. significant supply shortages and inflation - notjust in the boating industry, but through all of our lives.

Main: It’s a sign of the times when an $80,000 full featured, plate centre console with a T-top is considered good value. It’s a nice looking rig on the water. Above: It’s an optical illusion. They boys aren’t sitting in the lap. The seat is wide enough for two people.

This boat has lips welded around the opening of the hatches. There is channelling to direct the water from the deck through the channels and down onto the main deck. Your stuff stays dry! You needed to have bought a fibreglass boat to get that in the past.

Yamaha’s F130 outboard pushes this rig along and it’s the maximum that this hull is rated to.

So we are now at a point where I jump in a full featured 5.6 metre plate aluminium boat that costs around $80,000 and I think it’s not too bad a deal!

It definitely seems that every year when I test Stessco boats they seem to have evolved to a higher level. There is no doubting that the Albacore centre console 560 is a pretty neat looking rig.

Sure, the colours match the F-series 130 Yamaha on the back, but it’s more than that. The finish is neat, everything is positioned correctly and they are starting to pay attention to the little details that make a difference when you own a boat like this.

Here is an example. A raised front of casting deck gives you plenty of storage place underneath. The only place where water can get into this storage area is through the hatches. Most manufacturers

Add to this a handful of gas struts to keep those hatches open while you’re loading them and all of a sudden you have a practical, functional solution to an age old problem in alloy boats. Well done.

The Albacore CC560 is eminently towable by any twin cab four-wheel-drive or larger. It can quite easily take you and a couple of mates for a big day on the open water, or nearly as successfully load the family in for a weekend of camping.

The padded gunnels and fold down rear lounge add an element of comfort, while the broad console seat eats up a lot of other gear. The console is definitely large enough to hold a couple of big sounders as well as all of the other gauges you will need for a day on the water.

And I was surprised by the sturdiness of the T-top. It’s braced at its connection point to the deck,attached to the console itself, and can some port an adult swinging from it at the front or rear.

They keep the weight down by using a soft material instead of fibreglass of 1.6 km/L. Couple this with a 110 L fuel tank and your economical maximum range is well north of 200km.

The theory of Stessco’s console build is also interesting. There are a couple of large panels where you flush mount your electronics and gauges and can have those panels undone and down while you’re working

25”

Capacity 5 persons

Hull weight .................. 575kg or aluminium. Often manufacturers go a little heavy up there and the weight tends to be a negative.

Although the 130hp did feel a little underpowered, the economy from this rig is excellent. The most economical cruising speed is 3500rpm or 32 km/hour where you get 2.44 km/L of fuel burned. Open it up and you get 69km/hour at 6100 rpm, but only an economy on the back of them. Finish rigging, screw them in place and you should be all neat and ready to go.

The transom has all of the inclusions of a larger centre console boat – live bait tank, bait rigging station and transom door.

Granted that the test day was pretty calm, but the ride felt smooth and there were plenty of places to hold on while cornering or accelerating.

Finally, the SRH (Soft Ride Hull) Plate features fully welded reverse chined all the way from transom to bow. Previously, these were only pressed and ran for around 2/3 of the hull. You can see them working in the YouTube review on the Fishing Monthly channel - scan the QR code in the opening pic.

This is exactly how the SRH Plate hull and the extended, welded, reverse chines are supposed to work. They take the water and angle it back down and out from bow to stern.

As tested, this package came in at around $85,000, although you can get in one for just under $80K. See your local Stessco dealer for more details and to quote your build or visit www.stessco.com.au.

Top: The centre storage box is open at the front. Often these areas are accessible only from the top.

Above: Stessco keeps the weight down in the T-top by using UV Stable Marine Fabric rather than aluminium or fibreglass.

There is plenty of room to walk both port and starboard of the console. Note the full length, padded gunwale.

Top: There is a reasonable amount of room in the cockpit, which gets bigger when the rear lounge is folded down.

Above: This is the first time I’ve seen Stessco’s new console design. You can flush mount electronics into the panels and remove them to work on them.

Standard inclusions in the transom include a transom door and live bait tank.

The front casting deck is quite high, so you can keep a mountain of gear underneath.

Top Left: I love the fact that there are lips mounted around the storage hatch openings. Water drains away from rather than into the hatches.

Top Right: We don’t see that many carpeted anchor wells - it keeps the noise down. Also comes with an electric motor bracket as a standard inclusion.

Bottom Left: The T-top stabilisers look a little clunky, but they do keep the framework solid. Bottom Right: The front hatches also have a gas struts to keep the lids open while you are working underneath them.

Top Left: Standard side pockets keep all of your regularly used gear handy.

Top Right: It’s great to see fully welded, fold up steps. These are the only solution which lasts a long time. Bottom Left: I think it is no accident that the colour scheme on the boat matches the colour of the outboard. The companies do lots of work together. Bottom Right: There are duckboards on each side which allow you to climb up and over the transom.