Its neat, its cool, Ray Hunt designed it, and everyone loves
it even if they wouldn't own one. And despite the fact that Bertram
made 3 additional variants of the 31 hull, when you hear people
talking about the Bertram 31, this is it. Possibly the most famous
sport fishing boat ever built, continuously in production for
25 years right up to 1986, with the last year dubbed the "Silver
Aniversery Edition."
We get a lot of requests for a review of this boat, but we have
to wonder where the requesters have been living for the last quarter
century. We didn't think a review would be necessary. Still don't,
for that matter. But when we stopped by the Merritt Boat Works
in Pompano recently and saw this one being gussied up, we took
a look see and a few pix. Merritts, of course, is one of those
places where, if you have to ask the cost, you are probably in
the wrong place. But someone had sprung the sluice gates open
on this little beauty, starting with a new paint job.
Its one of the few you'll see with a full tuna tower, whereas
most with towers will be a marlin tower which is probably a much
better choice for a small boat. All that weight up top can make
a boat, well, a bit wobbly.This is a fishing boat and you shouldn't
make the mistake of thinking that its good for much of anything
else, except scuba diving, for which use it also excels. I once
did a Bahamas trip with four guys for a week. intending to sleep
aboard, after two days we were off in seach of hotel rooms. The
cabin is good for storing stuff and taking a leak, but not much
else. Its mainly for the hale and hearty, for there is no escape
from the sun and weather on this boat unless you want to relax
in a box.
There is plenty of horizontal space, but little vertical space.
As you can see in the above photo, there is no depth to the hull;
its designed to place you close to the water -- and that's all.
Storage? Forget it. What little there is won't keep anything dry.
If you are 6-2 and 240, you probably won't like this boat much;
its better scaled to smaller people. Like 5-8 and 160.A lot of
folks think that this boat is built like a tank. Its not.
The weights varied over the years from 10,000 to 12, 000 lbs.,
very light for a 31 footer. Actually she's 30'-7".
At that weight she does okay with smaller engines, which are
desireable from her limited fuel capacity standpoint. But who
the heck wants small engines in a boat like this? Damn the torpedoes,
etcetera, full speed ahead. Chop a hole anywhere and you'd be
surprised at how thin the laminate is. Fortunately her builders
knew how to get strength from thin laminates. And they did. Although
they're not beyond stress cracking along the toe rails, which
is quite prevalent. The early models had wood decks and you know
what that means . . . .
Its a wet boat. Big time wet, because its got a
full bow with little flare. And its a southern boat, because I sure
wouldn't want to be out in cold waters in this one. You won't stay
dry even on the bridge. Speaking of which, on the older models is
much too small. The side coamings are a good 14" in on each
side, making it terribly cramped with a bench seat (which was standard)
or two chairs. Notice on this one there is only one pedastal chair.
On later models the bridge was mercifully widened.

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The old style bridge
is quite narrow. This one's only got one chair. |

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The cockpit is just
plain huge and looks especially good when overlaid with teak. |
The very wide (for her time) 11'-2" beam without
chine flats means that shes not as deep veed as you'd expect of
a Bertram. She does very well, but she's not going to carry 22 knots
into a three foot head sea. You'll get by with 16 kn, and can do
22 in two footers with a bit of kidney crunching. But her real strength
is sea kindliness at trolling speeds. This is not a boat that does
whip-snap rolling or pitching to throw you off your feet. That's
a critical feature for any serious fishing boat where the ability
to remain standing up is so important. Her VERY low center of gravity
and engines amidships makes this as stable and smooth rolling a
boat as you're going to get.
The cockpit deck is a whopping 14 feet long,
although the engine boxes take up the forward third. Even so its
a huge deck where even a full tournament chair won't cramp the action.
But the cockpit depth is also a little disconcerting from the standpoint
that it will hit the average sized person just at, not above the
knee. There's a real problem here when leaning over the gunwale
to grab a leader, as your foot wants to slip and send you over the
side. The Blackfin 29 and 32, whose designers I suspect more or
less copied the 31 SF, corrected this by adding another 4 inches
of gunwale height. It makes a world of difference.
This is also a very simple, uncomplicated and easy
boat to maintain. It just doesn't get much easier than this because
there isn't much there, and what is there is easy to reach. Its
the kind of boat to own if you don't use your boat much
because there's so little there to go to rot and ruin. Note the
emphasis there, guys?
Unquestionably what made this boat such a big seller
are her gorgeous lines. Here it is three decades later and it is
still just as attractive to contemporary eyes as ever. Once again
proving that good design is timeless. In the last ten years a lot
of these boats went into decline and you could pick up a run down
copy pretty cheap. But they're making a comeback now and prices
are escalating, though there's still a few bargains to be had. This
is definitely a boat worth dumping a bunch of money into.
For a project boat, they don't get any easier than
this. Just remove the engine boxes and the engines come right out.
The decks are loaded with hatches and a very large removable section
over the fuel tank in the center on models with glass decks. They're
easy and inexpensive to paint, and with a new AwlGrip job these
boats can really sparkle. If you're going to buy one, spend some
money on paint. It will look absolutely like new and you'll never
regret it. Even if you have to finance it. Accented with teak covering
boards, or even a teak overlay on the cockpit, the boat really shines.
But while teak has justifyably gone out of fashion because of high
maintenace, the teak deck looks incredibly good on this boat, nicely
setting off all that whiteness.
Owning one of these is about pride in ownership.
Its about people who love fine boats. If you haven't fallen in love
with her (Oh, yeah, it is a HER!), go buy a lesser breed. Don't
disgrace the Gods of the Sea and yourself by buying and neglecting
one of these classics.
Not a family boat, this one's for fishinfanatics
and boat nuts only.
| These
are "reviews", not surveys, and bear no resemblance
to our survey reports.
We do not publish the results of the surveys that we perform.
Please note that the purpose of these reviews is educational,
to help you discern the differences in quality among boats
generally. They are not offered as a means to help you evaluate
any particular boat builder. We have no other reviews than
those posted. |
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